High-Precision Framework for Expected Hitting Times Analysis in the Dice-Sum Process

Abstract

We study the expected number of rolls required for the cumulative sum of a fair six-sided die to first enter a prescribed target set H⊂Z0. A one-variable dynamic-programming formulation is introduced that removes dependence on the roll count. Within this framework, the infinite process is truncated at a large cutoff N and corrected by an analytically derived overshoot term that accounts for the rare event of exceeding N before entering H. Explicit bounds on this residual yield a strict two-sided estimate of the truncation error. The method is numerically efficient, requiring constant memory and linear time in the cutoff. For the perfect-square target set H=\n2:n∈N\, all quantities are evaluated explicitly, yielding \[ E[T]=7.07976423755110510389555305690818489468…, \] provably correct to 1,017 decimal places. This constitutes the most precise result known to date and establishes a general framework for high-accuracy computation of discrete hitting times.

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