The Fine Structure Constant and Discrete Calculus – GKO2018 To initiate this discussion, we kindly refer to our paper: The Elliptic Matrix and Discrete Calculus1) which among other things, introduces a shorthand for the Binomial Coefficient: k n n! k1! n (n 1) (n 2)⋯ (n k 1) n 1 n k 1 nk k (n k )! k !
Our aim here is to solve a special 1st order inhomogeneous recursive equation with two independent variables (, z) and two indices (n, m) where the former is our primary recursive index while the latter is a class-label to fully employ the discrete calculus at hand:
n
f ( , z ) 1 m n
z
m
n m1
f nm1 ( , z )
; ℝ ; z ℂ
Observe a first order recursion equation with a constant inhomogeneity we set to unity without loss of generality, as the function fn can absorb any non-unity constant. With a simple multiplicative transform to a new function gn with auxiliary property g0 = f0, the coefficient to fn+1 can be made unity which delivers our solution as a simple sum:
f ( , z ) m n
g ( , z ) m n
zn
m 2
n m1
n z
g ( , z ) m n
f ( , z )
m n 1
m1
n m 2
g ( , z ) m n 1
z n1
g nm1 ( , z )
m1
n1 k
g ( , z ) m 0
m 2
k 0
z
k
m1
f 0m ( , z )
m 2
For the trivial case m = 0, the function on the right surfaced about 13 years ago in the works of Hans de Vries2) on the Fine Structure Constant = 1/137.035999139(31) with present relative standard uncertainty of 0.23 ppb3). Furthermore, he asserted that the said sum for m = 0 is equal to a scaled Gaussian Kernel as follows:
k f 00 ( , 2 ) k2 k 0 (2 )
1
k 0
2
k
2
k ( k 1)
k ( k 1)
e 4
To put his assertion to a numerical test, we solve this equation for Alpha () using a calculation engine with 100 decimal digits which gives the following value for the Fine Structure Constant to 27 significant digits: 1
137.035999095829700489647400 ; 1024
If Hans de Vries’s assertion holds, continued measurements of the Fine Structure Constant should replicate all our 27 decimal digits above, so time will tell. Still we have to wait a long time for all 27 digits to manifest, as we expect the precision of the Fine Structure Constant to increase by 1-2 digits every 10 years. However, for us impatient, we know that a Jacobi’s Theta Function4) solves the special case = 1:
f 00 (1, 2 ) (2 ) k 0
k 2
1 12 8 2 2 0,
1 2
1 8 2
1 2
k 12
2
j 0
So we go right ahead and try to evaluate the sum analytically - which will be the ultimate judge of the truth. 1) 2) 3) 4)
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/260480783_The_Elliptic_Matrix_and_Discrete_Calculus_-_GKO-2014 http://www.physics-quest.org/fine_structure_constant.pdf https://pml.nist.gov/cgi-bin/cuu/Value?alphinv|search_for=Fine+Structure+Constant http://mathworld.wolfram.com/JacobiThetaFunctions.html
Guðlaugur Kristinn Óttarsson – Academy of Industry & Arts – 11.07.2018 –
[email protected]