The decimal expansion of
. The 4000th digit falls within the repeating pattern at the 4th position, which is 1.
The fraction
as a decimal is a repeating decimal with a pattern.
![\[ (1)/(175) = 0.\overline{005714} \]](https://img.qammunity.org/2024/formulas/mathematics/high-school/59jex5gvb2nd2bimyhoytubccgt32fl9gl.png)
The pattern here is
, and it repeats infinitely.
To find the
th digit after the decimal point, first, determine the position of the
th digit within this pattern:
Divide $4000$ by the length of the repeating pattern ($6$) to find the number of complete repetitions:
![\[ 4000 / 6 = 666 \, \text{(with a remainder of 4)} \]](https://img.qammunity.org/2024/formulas/mathematics/high-school/l3s079peb8jh11ifj3etf6tr4ce0s03m4g.png)
This means there are 666 complete repetitions of the pattern within the first 4000 digits, with 4 additional digits.
Identify the 4th digit in the repeating pattern
:
![\[ 0.005714 \]](https://img.qammunity.org/2024/formulas/mathematics/high-school/be2sx4bbok5lunsdcmo217s6nh9gt9lq69.png)
So, the 4000th digit falls within the 4th digit of the repeating pattern, which is 1.
Therefore, the
th digit following the decimal point in the expansion of
is 1.