First digit law from Laplace transform

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Abstract

The occurrence of digits 1 through 9 as the leftmost nonzero digit of numbers from real-world sources is distributed unevenly according to an empirical law, known as Benford's law or the first digit law. It remains obscure why a variety of data sets generated from quite different dynamics obey this particular law. We perform a study of Benford's law from the application of the Laplace transform, and find that the logarithmic Laplace spectrum of the digital indicator function can be approximately taken as a constant. This particular constant, being exactly the Benford term, explains the prevalence of Benford's law. The slight variation from the Benford term leads to deviations from Benford's law for distributions which oscillate violently in the inverse Laplace space. We prove that the whole family of completely monotonic distributions can satisfy Benford's law within a small bound. Our study suggests that the origin of Benford's law is from the way that we write numbers, thus should be taken as a basic mathematical knowledge.

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APA

Cong, M., Li, C., & Ma, B. Q. (2019). First digit law from Laplace transform. Physics Letters, Section A: General, Atomic and Solid State Physics, 383(16), 1836–1844. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physleta.2019.03.017

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