Questions tagged [transcendental-numbers]

Transcendental numbers are numbers that cannot be the root of a nonzero polynomial with rational coefficients (i.e., not an algebraic number). Examples of such numbers are $\pi$ and $e$.

Let $\mathbb{A}\subset \mathbb{C}$ be the set of algebraic numbers: $$ \mathbb{A} = \{ z\in \mathbb{C}: p(z)=0, p(z)\in \mathbb{Z}[x] \} $$The set of transcendental numbers is $\mathbb{A}^c$. The first construction of a transcendental number, $\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} 10^{-n!}$, was due to Liouville in 1851.

If we fix a degree of polynomials in $\mathbb{Z}[x]$, there are only countably many such polynomials, each with finitely many roots. Then $\mathbb{A}$ is countable, whence $\mathbb{A}^c$ is uncountable. Put crudely, 'most' complex numbers are transcendental, though showing a particular number is transcendental is usually rather difficult.

All transcendental numbers have an irrationality measure of at least 2; see for more information.

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Non-transcendental number with powers being irrational

Is there a real number $r$ such that all $r^n$ are irrational for all integers $n\ge1$ but it is not transcendental?
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Why a root for an integer polynomial in definition of transcendental number?

I've read many definitions for a transcendental number and some of them say that a transcendental number is a number that is not the root of any integer polynomial, while other say is a number that is not the root of any rational polynomial. My…
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Are there transcendental numbers that cannot be reached?

This is a hard question to ask. But I've been contemplating transcendental numbers. I know that there are infinitely many; simply multiply a known transcendental (like pi) by every rational number. So are there any transcendental numbers that we…
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If $a$ is a transcendental number, then is $a^n$ also a transcendental number?

If $a$ is a transcendental number (i.e., a number s.t. there does not exist a polynomial $P(x)$ s.t. $P(a) = 0$), is $a^n$ also transcendental? It would seem to me that it should be, but I can't figure out why. How would I prove this?
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