Base and Normality
Main Concept
A numeral system is a way of representing real numbers as an ordered sequence of symbols called digits from a finite ordered set. The number, b, of symbols in this set is called the base. The symbols themselves represent the number zero, followed by the first b−1 positive integers.
For any base b, any real number can be written as a sum of the form ∑i=−∞nxi⁢bi, where 0 ≤ xi<b.
The corresponding base b representation of this number is:
xn⁢xn−1⋅⋅⋅x1⁢x0·x−1x−2⁢⋅⋅⋅
The standard numeral system around the world is the base ten decimal system, which uses the digits {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}. Systems using a base other than ten are used commonly in computing, including:
binary (base two), binary digits (bits) = {0,1}
octal (base eight), octal digits = {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7}
hexadecimal (base sixteen), hexadecimal digits = {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E,F}
In number theory, a real number x is called normal in base b if the sequence of digits in its representation in base b appears random, in the following sense: The density of any length k digit subsequence xi+1⋅⋅⋅xi+k in the representation of x is b−k. The number x is normal if it is normal in every base b>1.
Input a Maple expression in the box below (or choose one from the drop-down box) that evaluates to a real number. Choose a base b > 1, and Maple will find the base b representation for your number. Use the slider to adjust the number of significant figures, and look at the graph to see if your number is normal in that base.
Pi22/7sqrt(2)exp(1)ln(3)Other
base =
# of significant figures =
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