A109449 Triangle read by rows, T(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*A000111(n-k), 0 <= k <= n.
1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 3, 1, 5, 8, 6, 4, 1, 16, 25, 20, 10, 5, 1, 61, 96, 75, 40, 15, 6, 1, 272, 427, 336, 175, 70, 21, 7, 1, 1385, 2176, 1708, 896, 350, 112, 28, 8, 1, 7936, 12465, 9792, 5124, 2016, 630, 168, 36, 9, 1, 50521, 79360, 62325, 32640, 12810, 4032, 1050, 240, 45, 10, 1
Offset: 0
Examples
Triangle starts: 1; 1, 1; 1, 2, 1; 2, 3, 3, 1; 5, 8, 6, 4, 1; 16, 25, 20, 10, 5, 1; 61, 96, 75, 40, 15, 6, 1; 272, 427, 336, 175, 70, 21, 7, 1; 1385, 2176, 1708, 896, 350, 112, 28, 8, 1; 7936, 12465, 9792, 5124, 2016, 630, 168, 36, 9, 1; 50521, 79360, 62325, 32640, 12810, 4032, 1050, 240, 45, 10, 1; ...
Links
- Reinhard Zumkeller, Rows n = 0..125 of table, flattened
- Peter Luschny, The Swiss-Knife polynomials.
- J. Millar, N. J. A. Sloane and N. E. Young, A new operation on sequences: the Boustrophedon transform, J. Combin. Theory, 17A 44-54 1996 (Abstract, pdf, ps).
- Wikipedia, Boustrophedon transform
- Index entries for sequences related to boustrophedon transform
Crossrefs
Programs
-
Haskell
a109449 n k = a109449_row n !! k a109449_row n = zipWith (*) (a007318_row n) (reverse $ take (n + 1) a000111_list) a109449_tabl = map a109449_row [0..] -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 02 2013
-
Magma
f:= func< n,x | Evaluate(BernoulliPolynomial(n+1), x) >; A109449:= func< n,k | k eq n select 1 else 2^(2*n-2*k+1)*Binomial(n,k)*Abs(f(n-k,3/4) - f(n-k,1/4) + f(n-k,1) - f(n-k,1/2))/(n-k+1) >; [A109449(n,k): k in [0..n], n in [0..13]]; // G. C. Greubel, Jul 10 2025
-
Maple
From Peter Luschny, Jul 10 2009, edited Jun 06 2022: (Start) A109449 := (n,k) -> binomial(n, k)*A000111(n-k): seq(print(seq(A109449(n, k), k=0..n)), n=0..9); B109449 := (n,k) -> 2^(n-k)*binomial(n, k)*abs(euler(n-k, 1/2)+euler(n-k, 1)) -`if`(n-k=0, 1, 0): seq(print(seq(B109449(n, k), k=0..n)), n=0..9); R109449 := proc(n, k) option remember; if k = 0 then A000111(n) else R109449(n-1, k-1)*n/k fi end: seq(print(seq(R109449(n, k), k=0..n)), n=0..9); E109449 := proc(n) add(binomial(n, k)*euler(k)*((x+1)^(n-k)+ x^(n-k)), k=0..n) -x^n end: seq(print(seq(abs(coeff(E109449(n), x, k)), k=0..n)), n=0..9); sigma := n -> ifelse(n=0, 1, [1,1,0,-1,-1,-1,0,1][n mod 8 + 1]/2^iquo(n-1,2)-1): L109449 := proc(n) add(add((-1)^v*binomial(k, v)*(x+v+1)^n*sigma(k), v=0..k), k=0..n) end: seq(print(seq(abs(coeff(L109449(n), x, k)), k=0..n)), n=0..9); X109449 := n -> n!*coeff(series(exp(x*t)*(sech(t)+tanh(t)), t, 24), t, n): seq(print(seq(abs(coeff(X109449(n), x, k)), k=0..n)), n=0..9); (End)
-
Mathematica
lim = 10; s = CoefficientList[Series[(1 + Sin[x])/Cos[x], {x, 0, lim}], x] Table[k!, {k, 0, lim}]; Table[Binomial[n, k] s[[n - k + 1]], {n, 0, lim}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* Michael De Vlieger, Dec 24 2015, after Jean-François Alcover at A000111 *) T[n_, k_] := (n!/k!) SeriesCoefficient[(1 + Sin[x])/Cos[x], {x, 0, n - k}]; Table[T[n, k], {n, 0, 10}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Jun 27 2019 *)
-
PARI
A109449(n,k)=binomial(n,k)*if(n>k,2*abs(polylog(k-n,I)),1) \\ M. F. Hasler, Oct 05 2017
-
Sage
R = PolynomialRing(ZZ, 'x') @CachedFunction def skp(n, x) : if n == 0 : return 1 return add(skp(k, 0)*binomial(n, k)*(x^(n-k)-(n+1)%2) for k in range(n)[::2]) def A109449_row(n): x = R.gen() return [abs(c) for c in list(skp(n,x)-skp(n,x-1)+x^n)] for n in (0..10) : print(A109449_row(n)) # Peter Luschny, Jul 22 2012
Formula
Sum_{k>=0} T(n, k) = A000667(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(2n, 2k) = A000795(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(2n, 2k+1) = A009747(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(2n+1, 2k) = A003719(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(2n+1, 2k+1) = A002084(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(n, 2k) = A062272(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(n, 2k+1) = A062161(n).
Sum_{k>=0} (-1)^(k)*T(n, k) = A062162(n). - Johannes W. Meijer, Apr 20 2011
E.g.f.: exp(x*y)*(sec(x)+tan(x)). - Vladeta Jovovic, May 20 2007
T(n,k) = 2^(n-k)*C(n,k)*|E(n-k,1/2) + E(n-k,1)| - [n=k] where C(n,k) is the binomial coefficient, E(m,x) are the Euler polynomials and [] the Iverson bracket. - Peter Luschny, Jan 24 2009
From Reikku Kulon, Feb 26 2009: (Start)
A109449(n, n - 1) = n.
A109449(n, n) = 1.
From Peter Luschny, Jul 10 2009: (Start)
Let p_n(x) = Sum_{k=0..n} Sum_{v=0..k} (-1)^v C(k,v)*F(k)*(x+v+1)^n, where F(0)=1 and for k>0 F(k)=-1 + s_k 2^floor((k-1)/2), s_k is 0 if k mod 8 in {2,6}, 1 if k mod 8 in {0,1,7} and otherwise -1. T(n,k) are the absolute values of the coefficients of these polynomials.
Another way to express the polynomials p_n(x) is
p_n(x) = -x^n + Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k)*Euler(k)((x+1)^(n-k) + x^(n-k)). (End)
From Peter Bala, Jan 26 2011: (Start)
An explicit formula for the n-th row polynomial is
x^n + i*Sum_{k=1..n}((1+i)/2)^(k-1)*Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^j*binomial(k,j)*(x+i*j)^n, where i = sqrt(-1). This is the triangle of connection constants between the polynomial sequences {Z(n,x+1)} and {Z(n,x)}, where Z(n,x) denotes the zigzag polynomials described in A147309.
Denote the present array by M. The first column of the array (I-x*M)^-1 is a sequence of rational functions in x whose numerator polynomials are the row polynomials of A145876 - the generalized Eulerian numbers associated with the zigzag numbers. (End)
Let skp{n}(x) denote the Swiss-Knife polynomials A153641. Then
T(n,k) = [x^(n-k)] |skp{n}(x) - skp{n}(x-1) + x^n|. - Peter Luschny, Jul 22 2012
T(n,k) = abs(A247453(n,k)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 17 2014
Extensions
Edited, formula corrected, typo T(9,4)=2016 (before 2816) fixed by Peter Luschny, Jul 10 2009
Comments