I. The octahedral group
Given the nome $q=e^{\pi i \tau}$, then the elliptic lambda function $\lambda(\tau)$ shown below with its Ramanujan–Selberg continued fraction,
\begin{align} \big(\lambda(\tau)\big)^{1/8} &= \frac{\sqrt{2}\,\eta(\tfrac{\tau}{2})\,\eta^2(2\tau)}{\eta^3(\tau)} = \left(\frac{\vartheta_2(0,q)}{\vartheta_3(0,q)}\right)^{1/2}\\[8pt] &= \cfrac{\sqrt{2}\,q^{1/8}}{1+\cfrac{q}{1+q+\cfrac{q^2}{1+q^2+\cfrac{q^3}{1+q^3+\ddots}}}} \end{align}
was used by Hermite to solve the Bring quintic. This is a bit surprising since this continued fraction is more associated with the octahedral group (see Duke's "Continued Fractions and Modular Functions").
II. The icosahedral group
Given the square of the nome, $q=e^{2\pi i \tau}$, then the Rogers–Ramanujan continued fraction,
$$R(q) = \cfrac{q^{1/5}}{1+\cfrac{q}{1+\cfrac{q^2}{1+\cfrac{q^3}{1+\ddots}}}}$$
can indeed be used to solve the Bring quintic. But I don't know who found the solution below, since I refined it from a single example anonymously added to Wikipedia in Oct 6, 2021.
III. Solution
Let,
$$x^5-x+A=0$$
then a root is,
$$x = \frac{2-\big(1-R(q)\big)\big(1+R(q^2)\big)}{-5^{1/4}\sqrt{R(q)R(q^2)}\sqrt[4]{4\cot\big(4\arctan(\beta)\big)-3}}$$
where,
$$\beta = R(q)R^2(q^2)$$
$$q=e^{2\pi i\tau}$$
$$\tau = \frac{K'(k)}{K(k)}\sqrt{-\frac14}$$
$$k =\tan\left(\frac14\arcsin\Big(\frac{16}{25\sqrt5\, A^2}\Big)\right)$$
and $K(k)$ is the complete elliptic integral of the first kind. (The same $k$ appears in Hermite's method as in this post.)
Note: The function $\beta = R(q)R^2(q^2)$ is special enough that it was studied by Ramanujan and Shaun Cooper devoted an entire paper to it.
IV. Example
Let,
$$x^5-x+1=0$$
then,
\begin{align} k &=\tfrac{-5^{5/4}+\sqrt{25\sqrt{5}+16}}{+5^{5/4}+\sqrt{25\sqrt{5}-16}}\approx 0.072696\\[6pt] \tau &=\,\frac{K'(k)}{K(k)}\sqrt{-\frac14}\ \,\approx\, 1.275286\sqrt{-1} \end{align}
Since $\tau$ can be derived from the quintic's single parameter $A$, a fast way to calculate $R(q)$ is to use its quadratic relationship to the Dedekind eta function $\eta(\tau)$,
$$\frac1{R(q)} - R(q) = \frac{\eta\big(\frac{\tau}5\big)}{\eta(5\tau)}+1$$
Then, using the formula, we find the quintic root $\color{blue}{x\approx-1.1673}$.
Note: The special case $A = 1+i = (-4)^{1/4}$ is tricky since the formula yields a complex number such that its absolute value $|a+bi|=\sqrt{a^2+b^2}$ is equal also to the absolute value of a complex quintic root.
V. Monster
Recall that $\beta = R(q)R^2(q^2)$. Inspecting the original formula more closely, it turns out one expression is a square,
$$4\cot\big(4\arctan(\beta)\big)-3= \left(\frac{\eta(\tau)\,\eta(2\tau)}{\eta(5\tau)\,\eta(10\tau)}\right)^2$$
which, perhaps not surprisingly, is the McKay-Thompson series of class $10C$ for Monster, or A132041. Then using some equations from Cooper's paper, we can get rid of a $4$th root from the first formula below,
\begin{align} x &= \frac{2-\big(1-R(q)\big)\big(1+R(q^2)\big)}{-5^{1/4}\sqrt{R(q)R(q^2)}} \times \frac1{\sqrt[4]{4\cot\big(4\arctan(\beta)\big)-3}}\\[6pt] x &= \frac{2-\big(1-R(q)\big)\big(1+R(q^2)\big)}{-5^{1/4}\sqrt{R(q)R(q^2)}} \times \frac{\eta^2(10\tau)}{\eta^2(\tau)}\sqrt{\frac1{\beta}-\beta-4} \end{align}
Note: Can this be simplified further? And since $5^{1/4}$ has four complex solutions, then the correct one should be chosen, though one normally need only consider $\pm5^{1/4}$.
VI. Questions
- Who found this nice solution?
- Without factoring, how do we find the other four roots of the quintic using $R(q)$? (Hermite's method gives all five roots by using five $\tau$.)