Subexponentially increasing sums of partial quotients in continued fraction expansions
arXiv:1405.4747 · doi:10.1017/S0305004115000742
Abstract
We investigate from a multifractal analysis point of view the increasing rate of the sums of partial quotients $S\_n(x)=\sum\_{j=1}^n a\_j(x)$, where $x=[a\_1(x), a\_2(x), \cdots ]$ is the continued fraction expansion of an irrational $x\in (0,1)$. Precisely, for an increasing function $Ï: \mathbb{N} \rightarrow \mathbb{N}$, one is interested in the Hausdorff dimension of the sets\[E\_Ï= \left\{x\in (0,1): \lim\_{n\to\infty} \frac {S\_n(x)} {Ï(n)} =1\right\}.\]Several cases are solved by Iommi and Jordan, Wu and Xu, and Xu. We attack the remaining subexponential case $\exp(n^γ), \ γ\in [1/2, 1)$. We show that when $γ\in [1/2, 1)$, $E\_Ï$ has Hausdorff dimension $1/2$. Thus, surprisingly, the dimension has a jump from $1$ to $1/2$ at $Ï(n)=\exp(n^{1/2})$. In a similar way, the distribution of the largest partial quotient is also studied.
12 pages. More details for the proof of Theorem 1.2. are added