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transcendental number
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External Websites
- Stanford University - Department of Mathematics - Transcendental Number Theory
- University of Florida - Transcendental Number
- CORE - Transcendental Numbers
- Mathematics LibreTexts - Algebraic and Transcendental Numbers
- Washington University in St. Louis - Department of Mathematics - Transcendental Numbers: An Extended Example
- University of South Carolina - Department of Mathematics - The Beginning of Transcendental Numbers
- American Mathematical Society - A New Class of Transendental Numbers
- University of Toronto - Department of Mathematics - Introduction to Transcendental Numbers
- Academia - Transcendental number
- Wolfram Mathworld - Transcendental Number
- Related Topics:
- e
- pi
- number
- Liouville number
- Gelfond’s theorem
- On the Web:
- American Mathematical Society - A New Class of Transendental Numbers (Oct. 16, 2024)
transcendental number, number that is not algebraic, in the sense that it is not the solution of an algebraic equation with rational-number coefficients. Transcendental numbers are irrational, but not all irrational numbers are transcendental. For example, x2 – 2 = 0 has the solutions x = ±Square root of√2; thus, Square root of√2, an irrational number, is an algebraic number and not transcendental. Nearly all real and complex numbers are transcendental, but very few numbers have been proven to be transcendental. The numbers e and π are transcendental numbers.