Feller's coin-tossing constants

Feller's coin-tossing constants are a set of numerical constants which describe asymptotic probabilities that in n independent tosses of a fair coin, no run of k consecutive heads (or, equally, tails) appears.

William Feller showed that if this probability is written as p(n,k) then

where αk is the smallest positive real root of

and

Values of the constants

k
122
21.23606797...1.44721359...
31.08737802...1.23683983...
41.03758012...1.13268577...

For the constants are related to the golden ratio, , and Fibonacci numbers; the constants are and . The exact probability p(n,2) can be calculated either by using Fibonacci numbers, p(n,2) = or by solving a direct recurrence relation leading to the same result. For higher values of , the constants are related to generalizations of Fibonacci numbers such as the tribonacci and tetranacci numbers. The corresponding exact probabilities can be calculated as p(n,k) = .

Example

If we toss a fair coin ten times then the exact probability that no pair of heads come up in succession (i.e. n = 10 and k = 2) is p(10,2) =  = 0.140625. The approximation gives 1.44721356...×1.23606797...−11 = 0.1406263...

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Feller's coin-tossing constants, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.