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How do you approach a problem like (solve for $x$):

$$x^{x^{x^{x^{...}}}}=2$$

Also, I have no idea what to tag this as.

Thanks for any help.

Asaf Karagila
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Matt
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1 Answers1

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I'm just going to give you a HUGE hint. and you'll get it right way. Let $f(x)$ be the left hand expression. Clearly, we have that the left hand side is equal to $x^{f(x)}$. Now, see what you can do with it.

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    Note, though, that the argument that you have in mind only shows what the only possible solution is. The argument fails if the righthand side is $4$, say, as there is then no solution. The lefthand side converges iff $e^{-e}\le x\le e^{1/e}$. – Brian M. Scott Jul 04 '12 at 06:32
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    $x^{f(x)} = 2, f(x)ln(x)=ln(2), f(x) = ln(2)/ln(x)$, since $f(x) = 2, ln(2)/ln(x) = 2$, solving for x gives $e^{ln(2)/2}$? – Matt Jul 04 '12 at 06:38
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    @Matt. Dito. And even further, you may notice that $e^{\frac{ln(2)}{2}}=e^{ln(\sqrt{2})}=\sqrt{2}$. – T. Eskin Jul 04 '12 at 06:42
  • I see. Thanks for the hint/help! – Matt Jul 04 '12 at 06:42
  • Correcting my earlier comment: It does not fail when the righthand side is $4$. The restriction on $x$, however, is correct. – Brian M. Scott Jul 04 '12 at 06:57