Fibonacci sequence

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English[edit]

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Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Named after the Italian mathematician later known as Fibonacci (c.1175 – c.1250), who introduced the sequence to a European readership in his 1202 book Liber Abaci.

Noun[edit]

Fibonacci sequence (plural Fibonacci sequences)

  1. (mathematics) The sequence of integers, each of which is the sum of the preceding two, the first and second numbers both being 1.
    • 1999, Walter Steurer, Torsten Heibach, “3. Crystallography of Quasicrystals”, in Zbigniew M. Stadnik, editor, Physical Properties of Quasicrystals, Springer, page 60:
      If the Fibonacci sequence is chosen for the quasiperiodic direction of a 1D QC,[quasicrystal] it may simply be called a Fibonacci phase.
    • 2000, Martin Nowak, Robert M. May, Virus Dynamics: Mathematical Principles of Immunology and Virology, Oxford University Press, page 6:
      The number of adult rabbit pairs being present in consecutive months is then given by the Fibonacci sequence: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, ... (every term is the sum of its two predecessors). This work can be seen as the very beginning of mathematical biology, though one has to admit that the Fibonacci sequence exerts a greater fascination for number theorists than for reproductive biologists.
    • 2009, Roger V. Jean, Phyllotaxis: A Systemic Study in Plant Morphogenesis, Cambridge University Press, page 1:
      In a well-known chapter on phyllotaxis, Coxeter (1969) calls the appearance of the Fibonacci sequence in botany a "fascinatingly prevalent tendency," called by Cook (1914) the "Law of Wiesner." The prevalence of the Fibonacci sequence in phyllotactic patterns is often referred to as “the mystery of phyllotaxis,” and “the bugbear of botanists.”
  2. (mathematics) Any sequence of numbers such that each is the sum of the preceding two.
    • 1977, Scientific American, volume 236, page 137:
      Indeed, these pairs belong to a Fibonacci sequence of what are called Lucas numbers that begins 2, 1, 3, 4, 7, 11,...
    • 2007, Anthony Nicolaides, Make The Grade At GCSE Mathematics, Higher Tier, P.A.S.S. Publications, 3rd Edition, page 169,
      19. The first two terms of a Fibonacci sequence are a and b. Write out a few terms.

Usage notes[edit]

In modern usage, the sequence is often defined by specifying 0 as the zeroth number and 1 as the first. The notation is often used for the nth number in the sequence.

Related terms[edit]

Translations[edit]

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Further reading[edit]