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Khintchine (see [#!khintchine!#, pg. 59])
No properties of the representing continued fractions, analogous to those which have just been proved, are known for algebraic numbers of higher degree [as of]. [...] It is of interest to point out that up till the present time no continued fraction development of an algebraic number of higher degree than the second is known [emphasis added]. It is not even known if such a development has bounded elements. Generally speaking the problems associated with the continued fraction expansion of algebraic numbers of degree higher than the second are extremely difficult and virtually unstudied.
Richard Guy (see [#!guy:unsolved!#, pg. 260])
Is there an algebraic number of degree greater than two whose simple continued fraction has unbounded partial quotients? Does every such number have unbounded partial quotients?
Baum and Sweet [#!baum_sweet!#] answered the analogue of Richard
Guy's question but with algebraic numbers replaced by elements of a
field
other than
. (The field
is
, the field
of Laurent series in the variable
over the finite field with two
elements. An element of
is a polynomial in
plus a formal
power series in
.) They found an
of degree three
over
whose continued fraction has all terms of bounded degree, and
other elements of various degrees greater than
over
whose
continued fractions have terms of unbounded degree.
William 2007-06-01