Pentation

In mathematics, pentation is the operation of repeated tetration, just as tetration is the operation of repeated exponentiation.[1]

History

The word "pentation" was coined by Reuben Goodstein in 1947 from the roots penta- (five) and iteration. It is part of his general naming scheme for hyperoperations.[2]

Notation

Pentation can be written as a hyperoperation as a[5]b, or using Knuth's up-arrow notation as a \uparrow \uparrow \uparrow b or a \uparrow^{3}b. In this notation, a\uparrow b represents the exponentiation function a^b, which may be interpreted as the result of repeatedly applying the function x\mapsto ax, for b repetitions, starting from the number 1. Analogously, a\uparrow\uparrow b, tetration, represents the value obtained by repeatedly applying the function x\mapsto a\uparrow x, for b repetitions, starting from the number 1. And the pentation a \uparrow \uparrow \uparrow b represents the value obtained by repeatedly applying the function x\mapsto a\uparrow\uparrow x, for b repetitions, starting from the number 1.[3][4] Alternatively, in Conway chained arrow notation, a\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow b = a\rightarrow b\rightarrow 3.[5] Another proposed notation, as above, is {_{b}a}, though this is not extensible to higher hyperoperations.[6]

Examples

The values of the pentation function may also be obtained from the values in the fourth row of the table of values of a variant of the Ackermann function: if A(n,m) is defined by the Ackermann recurrence A(m-1,A(m,n-1)) with the initial conditions A(1,n)=an and A(m,1)=a, then a\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow b=A(4,b).[7]

As its base operation (tetration) has not been extended to non-integer heights, pentation a \uparrow^{3}b is currently only defined for integer values of a and b where a > 0 and b ≥ 0, and a few other integer values which may be uniquely defined. Like all other hyperoperations of order 3 (exponentiation) and higher, pentation has the following trivial cases (identities) which holds for all values of a and b within its domain:

Additionally, we can also define:

Other than the trivial cases shown above, pentation generates extremely large numbers very quickly such that there are only a few non-trivial cases that produce numbers that can be written in conventional notation, as illustrated below:

References

  1. Perstein, Millard H. (June 1962), "Algorithm 93: General Order Arithmetic", Communications of the ACM 5 (6): 344, doi:10.1145/367766.368160.
  2. Goodstein, R. L. (1947), "Transfinite ordinals in recursive number theory", The Journal of Symbolic Logic 12: 123–129, MR 0022537.
  3. Knuth, D. E. (1976), "Mathematics and computer science: Coping with finiteness", Science 194 (4271): 1235–1242, doi:10.1126/science.194.4271.1235, PMID 17797067.
  4. Blakley, G. R.; Borosh, I. (1979), "Knuth's iterated powers", Advances in Mathematics 34 (2): 109–136, doi:10.1016/0001-8708(79)90052-5, MR 549780.
  5. Conway, John Horton; Guy, Richard (1996), The Book of Numbers, Springer, p. 61, ISBN 9780387979939.
  6. http://www.tetration.org/Tetration/index.html
  7. Nambiar, K. K. (1995), "Ackermann functions and transfinite ordinals", Applied Mathematics Letters 8 (6): 51–53, doi:10.1016/0893-9659(95)00084-4, MR 1368037.