The fibbinary numbers were given their name by Marc LeBrun, because they combine certain properties of binary numbers and Fibonacci numbers:[1]
The number of fibbinary numbers less than any given power of two is a Fibonacci number. For instance, there are 13 fibbinary numbers less than 32, the numbers 0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 16, 17, 18, 20, and 21.[1]
The condition of having no two consecutive ones, used in binary to define the fibbinary numbers, is the same condition used in the Zeckendorf representation of any number as a sum of non-consecutive Fibonacci numbers.[1]
The th fibbinary number (counting 0 as the 0th number) can be calculated by expressing in its Zeckendorf representation, and re-interpreting the resulting binary sequence as the binary representation of a number.[1] For instance, the Zeckendorf representation of 19 is 101001 (where the 1's mark the positions of the Fibonacci numbers used in the expansion 19 = 13 + 5 + 1), the binary sequence 101001, interpreted as a binary number, represents 41 = 32 + 8 + 1, and the 19th fibbinary number is 41.
The th fibbinary number (again, counting 0 as 0th) is even or odd if and only if the th value in the Fibonacci word is 0 or 1, respectively.[3]
Properties
Because the property of having no two consecutive ones defines a regular language, the binary representations of fibbinary numbers can be recognized by a finite automaton, which means that the fibbinary numbers form a 2-automatic set.[4]
The fibbinary numbers include the Moser–de Bruijn sequence, sums of distinct powers of four. Just as the fibbinary numbers can be formed by reinterpreting Zeckendorff representations as binary, the Moser–de Bruijn sequence can be formed by reinterpreting binary representations as quaternary.[5]
Every fibbinary number takes one of the two forms or , where is another fibbinary number.[3][7]
Correspondingly, the power series whose exponents are fibbinary numbers,
obeys the functional equation[2]
^ abKimberling, Clark (2004), "Ordering words and sets of numbers: the Fibonacci case", in Howard, Frederic T. (ed.), Applications of Fibonacci Numbers, Volume 9: Proceedings of The Tenth International Research Conference on Fibonacci Numbers and Their Applications, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 137–144, doi:10.1007/978-0-306-48517-6_14, ISBN978-90-481-6545-2, MR2076798