Beukers 1979
Beukers 1979
Beukers 1979
F. BEUKERS
1. Introduction
lations with these integrals can be justified if one replaces I by and by letting e
tend to zero. 0 6
and the latter number is smaller than 3" for sufficiently large n.
(b) f ( ~l xy
oo
is a rational number whose denominator is a divisor ofdr3.
Ifr = s, then
f f *""/ 1 1
(c) — •xy
— dxdy = C(2)- — - . . . - — ,
JooJ l-xy r r*
n
1 1
log xv [ 1 1
0 0
— xy ^^- a)
JooJ \-xy
Develop (1— xy)~l into a geometrical series and perform the double integration.
Then we obtain
1
(2)
1 ( 1 1 ) 1 ( 1 1 )
k=o r - s \ k + s + < r + l k + r +a+\) r - s \ s + \ + o '" r+ a j '
- 1 I 1 1
2
r-s {(s+l) ' r2
Assertion (b) now follows straight away.
Assume r = s, then by (1) and (2),
i i
— dxdy= Z 2 *
J J l—xyxy kk==o o (k + r + a+l)
oo
By putting a = 0 assertion (c) becomes obvious. Differentiate with respect to a and
put a = 0. Then we obtain
1 i
logxy
/• /- logxy . . , , « -2
r r
0 0
yn(l-y)nxn(l-x)n
— dxdy.
(l—xy)n
( V 5 - 1 )5" r 1 ( V 5 - 1 )5n
} dxdy = C(2).
{ 2 j J l-xy { 2 j
0 < |,
and hence
, ( V 5 - 1 )5» • I 7 5 - 1 \5" t5\»
2 2L
0 < \An + Bn C(2)| < d [• Y~) C(2) < 9" { — — | C(2) < J - J
for sufficiently large n. This implies the irrationality of £(2), for if C(2) was rational the
expression in modulus signs would be bounded below independently of n.
THEOREM 2. ((3) is irrational.
noo
—logxy
1— xy
^ Pn(x)Pn(y)dxdy, (6)
A NOTE ON THE IRRATIONALITY OF £(2) AND £(3) 271
where n\Pn(x) = {—} x"(i— x)n. It is clear from Lemma 1 that integral (6) equals
[dxj
r P (x)P (y)
— dxdydz,
J 1 — (1— xy)z
where J denotes the triple integration. After an «-fold partial integration with respect
to x our integral changes into
f \xyzy\i-xy vn\j)
— dxdydz.
Substitute
1-z
w =
We obtain
r P (v)
(
{l-xy{l_wy "
(1— xy)w
J 1— (1—
After an K-fold partial integration with respect to y we obtain
n
f (lxyyn(ly)nw"(lw)n
x\L-x)y\i-yyw\i-wr
—— dxdydw. (7)
Reference
1. A. J. van der Poorten, "A proof that Euler missed . . . Apery's proof of the irrationality of £(3)'
To appear.
Department of Mathematics,
University of Leiden,
Postbus 9512,
2300 RA Leiden,
Netherlands.