cp's OEIS Frontend

This is a front-end for the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, made by Christian Perfect. The idea is to provide OEIS entries in non-ancient HTML, and then to think about how they're presented visually. The source code is on GitHub.

Showing 1-10 of 10 results.

A111886 Sixth column of triangle A112492 (inverse scaled Pochhammer symbols).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1764, 1942416, 1744835904, 1413470290176, 1083688832185344, 806595068762689536, 590914962115587293184, 429295503918929370218496, 310518802877016005311463424, 224098118280955193084850733056
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 12 2005

Keywords

Comments

Also continuation of family of differences of reciprocals of unity. See A001242 and triangle A008969.

Crossrefs

Also right-hand column 5 in triangle A008969.

Programs

  • Magma
    A111886:= func< n | (-1)*Factorial(6)^n*(&+[(-1)^j*Binomial(6,j)/j^n : j in [1..6]]) >;
    [A111886(n): n in [0..30]]; // G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023
    
  • Mathematica
    T[n_, k_]:= T[n, k]= If[k==0 || k==n, 1, (k+1)^(n-k)*T[n-1,k-1] +k!*T[n-1,k]]; (* T = A112492 *)
    Table[T[n+5,5], {n,0,30}] (* G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023 *)
  • PARI
    a(n) = -((6!)^n)*sum(j=1, 6, (-1)^j*binomial(6, j)/j^n); \\ Michel Marcus, Apr 28 2020
    
  • SageMath
    @CachedFunction
    def T(n,k): # T = A112492
        if (k==0 or k==n): return 1
        else: return (k+1)^(n-k)*T(n-1,k-1) + factorial(k)*T(n-1,k)
    def A111886(n): return T(n+5,5)
    [A111886(n) for n in range(31)] # G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023

Formula

G.f.: 1/Product_{j=1..6} (1-6!*x/j).
a(n) = -((6!)^n)*Sum_{j=1..6} (-1)^j*binomial(6, j)/j^n, n >= 0.
a(n) = A112492(n+5, 6), n>=0.

A111885 Row sums of triangle A112492.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 5, 20, 152, 2542, 100326, 10194844, 2809233510, 2212797607312, 5359196565766782, 39928779843430949176, 1018129474625651322506886, 85890171235256453902613870992, 26477529277143069417959927152215342
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 12 2005

Keywords

Crossrefs

Cf. A112492.

Programs

  • Magma
    T:= func< n,k | (-1)*Factorial(k+1)^(n-k)*(&+[(-1)^j*Binomial(k+1,j)/j^(n-k) : j in [1..k+1]]) >; // T = A112492
    A111885:= func< n | (&+[T(n,k): k in [0..n]]) >;
    [A111885(n): n in [0..40]]; // G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023
    
  • Mathematica
    T[n_, k_]:= T[n, k]= If[k==0 || k==n, 1, (k+1)^(n-k)*T[n-1, k-1] + k!*T[n-1, k]];
    a[n_]:= a[n]= Sum[T[n,k], {k,0,n}]; (* T = A112492 *)
    Table[a[n], {n,0,40}] (* G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023 *)
  • SageMath
    @CachedFunction
    def T(n,k): # T = A112492
        if (k==0 or k==n): return 1
        else: return (k+1)^(n-k)*T(n-1,k-1) + factorial(k)*T(n-1,k)
    def A111885(n): return sum(T(n,k) for k in range(n+1))
    [A111885(n) for n in range(31)] # G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023

Formula

a(n) = Sum_{j=0..n} A112492(n, j), n >= 0.

A111887 Seventh column of triangle A112492 (inverse scaled Pochhammer symbols).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 13068, 104587344, 673781602752, 3878864920694016, 21006340945438768128, 110019668725577574273024, 565858042127972959667208192, 2882220940619488483325345857536, 14605752814655604919042956624396288
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 12 2005

Keywords

Comments

Also continuation of family of differences of reciprocals of unity. See A001242, A111886 and triangle A008969.

Crossrefs

Also right-hand column 6 in triangle A008969.

Programs

  • Magma
    A111887:= func< n | (-1)*Factorial(7)^n*(&+[(-1)^j*Binomial(7,j)/j^n : j in [1..7]]) >;
    [A111887(n): n in [0..30]]; // G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023
    
  • Mathematica
    T[n_, k_]:= T[n, k]= If[k==0 || k==n, 1, (k+1)^(n-k)*T[n-1,k-1] + k!*T[n-1,k]]; (* T = A112492 *)
    Table[T[n+6,6], {n,0,30}] (* G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023 *)
  • PARI
    a(n) = -((7!)^n)*sum(j=1, 7, ((-1)^j)*binomial(7, j)/j^n); \\ Michel Marcus, Apr 28 2020
    
  • SageMath
    @CachedFunction
    def T(n,k): # T = A112492
        if (k==0 or k==n): return 1
        else: return (k+1)^(n-k)*T(n-1,k-1) + factorial(k)*T(n-1,k)
    def A111887(n): return T(n+6,6)
    [A111887(n) for n in range(31)] # G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023

Formula

G.f.: 1/Product_{j=1..7} 1-7!*x/j.
a(n) = -((7!)^n) * Sum_{j=1..7} (-1)^j*binomial(7, j)/j^n, n>=0.
a(n) = A112492(n+6, 7), n>=0.

A111888 Eighth column of triangle A112492 (inverse scaled Pochhammer symbols).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 109584, 7245893376, 381495483224064, 17810567950611972096, 778101042571221893382144, 32762625292956765972873609216, 1351813956241264848815287984717824
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 12 2005

Keywords

Comments

Also continuation of family of Differences of reciprocals of unity. See A001242, A111887 and triangle A008969.

Crossrefs

Also right-hand column 7 in triangle A008969.

Programs

  • Magma
    A111888:= func< n | (-1)*Factorial(8)^n*(&+[(-1)^j*Binomial(8,j)/j^n : j in [1..8]]) >;
    [A111888(n): n in [0..30]]; // G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023
    
  • Mathematica
    T[n_, k_]:= T[n, k]= If[k==0 || k==n, 1, (k+1)^(n-k)*T[n-1,k-1] +k!*T[n-1,k]]; (* T = A112492 *)
    Table[T[n+7,7], {n,0,30}] (* G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023 *)
  • PARI
    a(n) = -((8!)^n)*sum(j=1, 8, ((-1)^j)*binomial(8, j)/j^n); \\ Michel Marcus, Apr 28 2020
    
  • SageMath
    @CachedFunction
    def T(n,k): # T = A112492
        if (k==0 or k==n): return 1
        else: return (k+1)^(n-k)*T(n-1,k-1) + factorial(k)*T(n-1,k)
    def A111888(n): return T(n+7,7)
    [A111888(n) for n in range(31)] # G. C. Greubel, Jul 24 2023

Formula

G.f.: 1/Product_{j=1..8} 1-8!*x/j.
a(n) = -((8!)^n) * Sum_{j=1..8} (-1)^j*binomial(8, j)/j^n, n>=0.
a(n) = A112492(n+7, 8), n>=0.

A000225 a(n) = 2^n - 1. (Sometimes called Mersenne numbers, although that name is usually reserved for A001348.)

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127, 255, 511, 1023, 2047, 4095, 8191, 16383, 32767, 65535, 131071, 262143, 524287, 1048575, 2097151, 4194303, 8388607, 16777215, 33554431, 67108863, 134217727, 268435455, 536870911, 1073741823, 2147483647, 4294967295, 8589934591
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

This is the Gaussian binomial coefficient [n,1] for q=2.
Number of rank-1 matroids over S_n.
Numbers k such that the k-th central binomial coefficient is odd: A001405(k) mod 2 = 1. - Labos Elemer, Mar 12 2003
This gives the (zero-based) positions of odd terms in the following convolution sequences: A000108, A007460, A007461, A007463, A007464, A061922.
Also solutions (with minimum number of moves) for the problem of Benares Temple, i.e., three diamond needles with n discs ordered by decreasing size on the first needle to place in the same order on the third one, without ever moving more than one disc at a time and without ever placing one disc at the top of a smaller one. - Xavier Acloque, Oct 18 2003
a(0) = 0, a(1) = 1; a(n) = smallest number such that a(n)-a(m) == 0 (mod (n-m+1)), for all m. - Amarnath Murthy, Oct 23 2003
Binomial transform of [1, 1/2, 1/3, ...] = [1/1, 3/2, 7/3, ...]; (2^n - 1)/n, n=1,2,3, ... - Gary W. Adamson, Apr 28 2005
Numbers whose binary representation is 111...1. E.g., the 7th term is (2^7) - 1 = 127 = 1111111 (in base 2). - Alexandre Wajnberg, Jun 08 2005
Number of nonempty subsets of a set with n elements. - Michael Somos, Sep 03 2006
For n >= 2, a(n) is the least Fibonacci n-step number that is not a power of 2. - Rick L. Shepherd, Nov 19 2007
Let P(A) be the power set of an n-element set A. Then a(n+1) = the number of pairs of elements {x,y} of P(A) for which x and y are disjoint and for which either x is a subset of y or y is a subset of x. - Ross La Haye, Jan 10 2008
A simpler way to state this is that it is the number of pairs (x,y) where at least one of x and y is the empty set. - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Oct 28 2011
2^n-1 is the sum of the elements in a Pascal triangle of depth n. - Brian Lewis (bsl04(AT)uark.edu), Feb 26 2008
Sequence generalized: a(n) = (A^n -1)/(A-1), n >= 1, A integer >= 2. This sequence has A=2; A003462 has A=3; A002450 has A=4; A003463 has A=5; A003464 has A=6; A023000 has A=7; A023001 has A=8; A002452 has A=9; A002275 has A=10; A016123 has A=11; A016125 has A=12; A091030 has A=13; A135519 has A=14; A135518 has A=15; A131865 has A=16; A091045 has A=17; A064108 has A=20. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Mar 03 2008
a(n) is also a Mersenne prime A000668 when n is a prime number in A000043. - Omar E. Pol, Aug 31 2008
a(n) is also a Mersenne number A001348 when n is prime. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 05 2008
With offset 1, = row sums of triangle A144081; and INVERT transform of A009545 starting with offset 1; where A009545 = expansion of sin(x)*exp(x). - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 10 2008
Numbers n such that A000120(n)/A070939(n) = 1. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Oct 15 2008
For n > 0, sequence is equal to partial sums of A000079; a(n) = A000203(A000079(n-1)). - Lekraj Beedassy, May 02 2009
Starting with offset 1 = the Jacobsthal sequence, A001045, (1, 1, 3, 5, 11, 21, ...) convolved with (1, 2, 2, 2, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, May 23 2009
Numbers n such that n=2*phi(n+1)-1. - Farideh Firoozbakht, Jul 23 2009
a(n) = (a(n-1)+1)-th odd numbers = A005408(a(n-1)) for n >= 1. - Jaroslav Krizek, Sep 11 2009
Partial sums of a(n) for n >= 0 are A000295(n+1). Partial sums of a(n) for n >= 1 are A000295(n+1) and A130103(n+1). a(n) = A006127(n) - (n+1). - Jaroslav Krizek, Oct 16 2009
If n is even a(n) mod 3 = 0. This follows from the congruences 2^(2k) - 1 ~ 2*2*...*2 - 1 ~ 4*4*...*4 - 1 ~ 1*1*...*1 - 1 ~ 0 (mod 3). (Note that 2*2*...*2 has an even number of terms.) - Washington Bomfim, Oct 31 2009
Let A be the Hessenberg matrix of order n, defined by: A[1,j]=1, A[i,i]:=2,(i>1), A[i,i-1]=-1, and A[i,j]=0 otherwise. Then, for n >= 1, a(n)=det(A). - Milan Janjic, Jan 26 2010
This is the sequence A(0,1;1,2;2) = A(0,1;3,-2;0) of the family of sequences [a,b:c,d:k] considered by G. Detlefs, and treated as A(a,b;c,d;k) in the W. Lang link given below. - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 18 2010
a(n) = S(n+1,2), a Stirling number of the second kind. See the example below. - Dennis P. Walsh, Mar 29 2011
Entries of row a(n) in Pascal's triangle are all odd, while entries of row a(n)-1 have alternating parities of the form odd, even, odd, even, ..., odd.
Define the bar operation as an operation on signed permutations that flips the sign of each entry. Then a(n+1) is the number of signed permutations of length 2n that are equal to the bar of their reverse-complements and avoid the set of patterns {(-2,-1), (-1,+2), (+2,+1)}. (See the Hardt and Troyka reference.) - Justin M. Troyka, Aug 13 2011
A159780(a(n)) = n and A159780(m) < n for m < a(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 21 2011
This sequence is also the number of proper subsets of a set with n elements. - Mohammad K. Azarian, Oct 27 2011
a(n) is the number k such that the number of iterations of the map k -> (3k +1)/2 == 1 (mod 2) until reaching (3k +1)/2 == 0 (mod 2) equals n. (see the Collatz problem). - Michel Lagneau, Jan 18 2012
For integers a, b, denote by a<+>b the least c >= a such that Hd(a,c) = b (note that, generally speaking, a<+>b differs from b<+>a). Then a(n+1)=a(n)<+>1. Thus this sequence is the Hamming analog of nonnegative integers. - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 13 2012
Pisano period lengths: 1, 1, 2, 1, 4, 2, 3, 1, 6, 4, 10, 2, 12, 3, 4, 1, 8, 6, 18, 4, ... apparently A007733. - R. J. Mathar, Aug 10 2012
Start with n. Each n generates a sublist {n-1,n-2,...,1}. Each element of each sublist also generates a sublist. Take the sum of all. E.g., 3->{2,1} and 2->{1}, so a(3)=3+2+1+1=7. - Jon Perry, Sep 02 2012
This is the Lucas U(P=3,Q=2) sequence. - R. J. Mathar, Oct 24 2012
The Mersenne numbers >= 7 are all Brazilian numbers, as repunits in base two. See Proposition 1 & 5.2 in Links: "Les nombres brésiliens". - Bernard Schott, Dec 26 2012
Number of line segments after n-th stage in the H tree. - Omar E. Pol, Feb 16 2013
Row sums of triangle in A162741. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 16 2013
a(n) is the highest power of 2 such that 2^a(n) divides (2^n)!. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Aug 17 2013
In computer programming, these are the only unsigned numbers such that k&(k+1)=0, where & is the bitwise AND operator and numbers are expressed in binary. - Stanislav Sykora, Nov 29 2013
Minimal number of moves needed to interchange n frogs in the frogs problem (see for example the NRICH 1246 link or the Britton link below). - N. J. A. Sloane, Jan 04 2014
a(n) !== 4 (mod 5); a(n) !== 10 (mod 11); a(n) !== 2, 4, 5, 6 (mod 7). - Carmine Suriano, Apr 06 2014
After 0, antidiagonal sums of the array formed by partial sums of integers (1, 2, 3, 4, ...). - Luciano Ancora, Apr 24 2015
a(n+1) equals the number of ternary words of length n avoiding 01,02. - Milan Janjic, Dec 16 2015
With offset 0 and another initial 0, the n-th term of 0, 0, 1, 3, 7, 15, ... is the number of commas required in the fully-expanded von Neumann definition of the ordinal number n. For example, 4 := {0, 1, 2, 3} := {{}, {{}}, {{}, {{}}}, {{}, {{}}, {{}, {{}}}}}, which uses seven commas. Also, for n>0, a(n) is the total number of symbols required in the fully-expanded von Neumann definition of ordinal n - 1, where a single symbol (as usual) is always used to represent the empty set and spaces are ignored. E.g., a(5) = 31, the total such symbols for the ordinal 4. - Rick L. Shepherd, May 07 2016
With the quantum integers defined by [n+1]A001045%20are%20given%20by%20q%20=%20i%20*%20sqrt(2)%20for%20i%5E2%20=%20-1.%20Cf.%20A239473.%20-%20_Tom%20Copeland">q = (q^(n+1) - q^(-n-1)) / (q - q^(-1)), the Mersenne numbers are a(n+1) = q^n [n+1]_q with q = sqrt(2), whereas the signed Jacobsthal numbers A001045 are given by q = i * sqrt(2) for i^2 = -1. Cf. A239473. - _Tom Copeland, Sep 05 2016
For n>1: numbers n such that n - 1 divides sigma(n + 1). - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Oct 08 2016
This is also the second column of the Stirling2 triangle A008277 (see also A048993). - Wolfdieter Lang, Feb 21 2017
Except for the initial terms, the decimal representation of the x-axis of the n-th stage of growth of the two-dimensional cellular automaton defined by "Rule 659", "Rule 721" and "Rule 734", based on the 5-celled von Neumann neighborhood initialized with a single on cell. - Robert Price, Mar 14 2017
a(n), n > 1, is the number of maximal subsemigroups of the monoid of order-preserving partial injective mappings on a set with n elements. - James Mitchell and Wilf A. Wilson, Jul 21 2017
Also the number of independent vertex sets and vertex covers in the complete bipartite graph K_{n-1,n-1}. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017
Sum_{k=0..n} p^k is the determinant of n X n matrix M_(i, j) = binomial(i + j - 1, j)*p + binomial(i+j-1, i), in this case p=2 (empirical observation). - Tony Foster III, May 11 2019
The rational numbers r(n) = a(n+1)/2^(n+1) = a(n+1)/A000079(n+1) appear also as root of the n-th iteration f^{[n]}(c; x) = 2^(n+1)*x - a(n+1)*c of f(c; x) = f^{[0]}(c; x) = 2*x - c as r(n)*c. This entry is motivated by a riddle of Johann Peter Hebel (1760 - 1826): Erstes Rechnungsexempel(Ein merkwürdiges Rechnungs-Exempel) from 1803, with c = 24 and n = 2, leading to the root r(2)*24 = 21 as solution. See the link and reference. For the second problem, also involving the present sequence, see a comment in A130330. - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 28 2019
a(n) is the sum of the smallest elements of all subsets of {1,2,..,n} that contain n. For example, a(3)=7; the subsets of {1,2,3} that contain 3 are {3}, {1,3}, {2,3}, {1,2,3}, and the sum of smallest elements is 7. - Enrique Navarrete, Aug 21 2020
a(n-1) is the number of nonempty subsets of {1,2,..,n} which don't have an element that is the size of the set. For example, for n = 4, a(3) = 7 and the subsets are {2}, {3}, {4}, {1,3}, {1,4}, {3,4}, {1,2,4}. - Enrique Navarrete, Nov 21 2020
From Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 04 2021: (Start)
Also the number of dominating sets in the complete graph K_n.
Also the number of minimum dominating sets in the n-helm graph for n >= 3. (End)
Conjecture: except for a(2)=3, numbers m such that 2^(m+1) - 2^j - 2^k - 1 is composite for all 0 <= j < k <= m. - Chai Wah Wu, Sep 08 2021
a(n) is the number of three-in-a-rows passing through a corner cell in n-dimensional tic-tac-toe. - Ben Orlin, Mar 15 2022
From Vladimir Pletser, Jan 27 2023: (Start)
a(n) == 1 (mod 30) for n == 1 (mod 4);
a(n) == 7 (mod 120) for n == 3 (mod 4);
(a(n) - 1)/30 = (a(n+2) - 7)/120 for n odd;
(a(n) - 1)/30 = (a(n+2) - 7)/120 = A131865(m) for n == 1 (mod 4) and m >= 0 with A131865(0) = 0. (End)
a(n) is the number of n-digit numbers whose smallest decimal digit is 8. - Stefano Spezia, Nov 15 2023
Also, number of nodes in a perfect binary tree of height n-1, or: number of squares (or triangles) after the n-th step of the construction of a Pythagorean tree: Start with a segment. At each step, construct squares having the most recent segment(s) as base, and isosceles right triangles having the opposite side of the squares as hypotenuse ("on top" of each square). The legs of these triangles will serve as the segments which are the bases of the squares in the next step. - M. F. Hasler, Mar 11 2024
a(n) is the length of the longest path in the n-dimensional hypercube. - Christian Barrientos, Apr 13 2024
a(n) is the diameter of the n-Hanoi graph. Equivalently, a(n) is the largest minimum number of moves between any two states of the Towers of Hanoi problem (aka problem of Benares Temple described above). - Allan Bickle, Aug 09 2024

Examples

			For n=3, a(3)=S(4,2)=7, a Stirling number of the second kind, since there are 7 ways to partition {a,b,c,d} into 2 nonempty subsets, namely,
  {a}U{b,c,d}, {b}U{a,c,d}, {c}U{a,b,d}, {d}U{a,b,c}, {a,b}U{c,d}, {a,c}U{b,d}, and {a,d}U{b,c}. - _Dennis P. Walsh_, Mar 29 2011
From _Justin M. Troyka_, Aug 13 2011: (Start)
Since a(3) = 7, there are 7 signed permutations of 4 that are equal to the bar of their reverse-complements and avoid {(-2,-1), (-1,+2), (+2,+1)}. These are:
  (+1,+2,-3,-4),
  (+1,+3,-2,-4),
  (+1,-3,+2,-4),
  (+2,+4,-1,-3),
  (+3,+4,-1,-2),
  (-3,+1,-4,+2),
  (-3,-4,+1,+2). (End)
G.f. = x + 3*x^2 + 7*x^3 + 15*x^4 + 31*x^5 + 63*x^6 + 127*x^7 + ...
For the Towers of Hanoi problem with 2 disks, the moves are as follows, so a(2) = 3.
12|_|_ -> 2|1|_ -> _|1|2 -> _|_|12  - _Allan Bickle_, Aug 07 2024
		

References

  • P. Bachmann, Niedere Zahlentheorie (1902, 1910), reprinted Chelsea, NY, 1968, vol. 2, p. 75.
  • Ralph P. Grimaldi, Discrete and Combinatorial Mathematics: An Applied Introduction, Fifth Edition, Addison-Wesley, 2004, p. 134.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §3.2 Prime Numbers, p. 79.
  • Johann Peter Hebel, Gesammelte Werke in sechs Bänden, Herausgeber: Jan Knopf, Franz Littmann und Hansgeorg Schmidt-Bergmann unter Mitarbeit von Ester Stern, Wallstein Verlag, 2019. Band 3, S. 20-21, Loesung, S. 36-37. See also the link below.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The Little Book of Bigger Primes, Springer-Verlag NY 2004. See pp. 46, 60, 75-83.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, page 141.
  • D. Wells, The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers, "Tower of Hanoi", Penguin Books, 1987, pp. 112-113.

Crossrefs

Cf. A000043 (Mersenne exponents).
Cf. A000668 (Mersenne primes).
Cf. A001348 (Mersenne numbers with n prime).
Cf. a(n)=A112492(n, 2). Rightmost column of A008969.
a(n) = A118654(n, 1) = A118654(n-1, 3), for n > 0.
Subsequence of A132781.
Smallest number whose base b sum of digits is n: this sequence (b=2), A062318 (b=3), A180516 (b=4), A181287 (b=5), A181288 (b=6), A181303 (b=7), A165804 (b=8), A140576 (b=9), A051885 (b=10).
Cf. A008277, A048993 (columns k=2), A000918, A130330.
Cf. A000225, A029858, A058809, A375256 (Hanoi graphs).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a000225 = (subtract 1) . (2 ^)
    a000225_list = iterate ((+ 1) . (* 2)) 0
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 20 2012
    
  • Maple
    A000225 := n->2^n-1; [ seq(2^n-1,n=0..50) ];
    A000225:=1/(2*z-1)/(z-1); # Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation, sequence starting at a(1)
  • Mathematica
    a[n_] := 2^n - 1; Table[a[n], {n, 0, 30}] (* Stefan Steinerberger, Mar 30 2006 *)
    Array[2^# - 1 &, 50, 0] (* Joseph Biberstine (jrbibers(AT)indiana.edu), Dec 26 2006 *)
    NestList[2 # + 1 &, 0, 32] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Feb 28 2011 *)
    2^Range[0, 20] - 1 (* Eric W. Weisstein, Jul 17 2017 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{3, -2}, {1, 3}, 20] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[1/(1 - 3 x + 2 x^2), {x, 0, 20}], x] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017 *)
  • PARI
    A000225(n) = 2^n-1  \\ Michael B. Porter, Oct 27 2009
    
  • PARI
    concat(0, Vec(x/((1-2*x)*(1-x)) + O(x^100))) \\ Altug Alkan, Oct 28 2015
    
  • Python
    def A000225(n): return (1<Chai Wah Wu, Jul 06 2022
  • SageMath
    def isMersenne(n): return n == sum([(1 - b) << s for (s, b) in enumerate((n+1).bits())]) # Peter Luschny, Sep 01 2019
    

Formula

G.f.: x/((1-2*x)*(1-x)).
E.g.f.: exp(2*x) - exp(x).
E.g.f. if offset 1: ((exp(x)-1)^2)/2.
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n-1} 2^k. - Paul Barry, May 26 2003
a(n) = a(n-1) + 2*a(n-2) + 2, a(0)=0, a(1)=1. - Paul Barry, Jun 06 2003
Let b(n) = (-1)^(n-1)*a(n). Then b(n) = Sum_{i=1..n} i!*i*Stirling2(n,i)*(-1)^(i-1). E.g.f. of b(n): (exp(x)-1)/exp(2x). - Mario Catalani (mario.catalani(AT)unito.it), Dec 19 2003
a(n+1) = 2*a(n) + 1, a(0) = 0.
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} binomial(n, k).
a(n) = n + Sum_{i=0..n-1} a(i); a(0) = 0. - Rick L. Shepherd, Aug 04 2004
a(n+1) = (n+1)*Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n, k)/(k+1). - Paul Barry, Aug 06 2004
a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n+1, k+1). - Paul Barry, Aug 23 2004
Inverse binomial transform of A001047. Also U sequence of Lucas sequence L(3, 2). - Ross La Haye, Feb 07 2005
a(n) = A099393(n-1) - A020522(n-1) for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 07 2006
a(n) = A119258(n,n-1) for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, May 11 2006
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 2*a(n-2); a(0)=0, a(1)=1. - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 07 2006
Sum_{n>0} 1/a(n) = 1.606695152... = A065442, see A038631. - Philippe Deléham, Jun 27 2006
Stirling_2(n-k,2) starting from n=k+1. - Artur Jasinski, Nov 18 2006
a(n) = A125118(n,1) for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 21 2006
a(n) = StirlingS2(n+1,2). - Ross La Haye, Jan 10 2008
a(n) = A024036(n)/A000051(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 14 2009
a(n) = A024088(n)/A001576(n). -Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 15 2009
a(2*n) = a(n)*A000051(n); a(n) = A173787(n,0). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 28 2010
For n > 0: A179857(a(n)) = A024036(n) and A179857(m) < A024036(n) for m < a(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 31 2010
From Enrique Pérez Herrero, Aug 21 2010: (Start)
a(n) = J_n(2), where J_n is the n-th Jordan Totient function: (A007434, is J_2).
a(n) = Sum_{d|2} d^n*mu(2/d). (End)
A036987(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 06 2012
a(n+1) = A044432(n) + A182028(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 07 2012
a(n) = A007283(n)/3 - 1. - Martin Ettl, Nov 11 2012
a(n+1) = A001317(n) + A219843(n); A219843(a(n)) = 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 30 2012
a(n) = det(|s(i+2,j+1)|, 1 <= i,j <= n-1), where s(n,k) are Stirling numbers of the first kind. - Mircea Merca, Apr 06 2013
G.f.: Q(0), where Q(k) = 1 - 1/(4^k - 2*x*16^k/(2*x*4^k - 1/(1 - 1/(2*4^k - 8*x*16^k/(4*x*4^k - 1/Q(k+1)))))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, May 22 2013
E.g.f.: Q(0), where Q(k) = 1 - 1/(2^k - 2*x*4^k/(2*x*2^k - (k+1)/Q(k+1))); (continued fraction).
G.f.: Q(0), where Q(k) = 1 - 1/(2^k - 2*x*4^k/(2*x*2^k - 1/Q(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, May 23 2013
a(n) = A000203(2^(n-1)), n >= 1. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Aug 17 2013
a(n) = Sum_{t_1+2*t_2+...+n*t_n=n} n*multinomial(t_1+t_2 +...+t_n,t_1,t_2,...,t_n)/(t_1+t_2 +...+t_n). - Mircea Merca, Dec 06 2013
a(0) = 0; a(n) = a(n-1) + 2^(n-1) for n >= 1. - Fred Daniel Kline, Feb 09 2014
a(n) = A125128(n) - A000325(n) + 1. - Miquel Cerda, Aug 07 2016
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Aug 07 2016: (Start)
Binomial transform of A057427.
Sum_{n>=0} a(n)/n! = A090142. (End)
a(n) = A000918(n) + 1. - Miquel Cerda, Aug 09 2016
a(n+1) = (A095151(n+1) - A125128(n))/2. - Miquel Cerda, Aug 12 2016
a(n) = (A079583(n) - A000325(n+1))/2. - Miquel Cerda, Aug 15 2016
Convolution of binomial coefficient C(n,a(k)) with itself is C(n,a(k+1)) for all k >= 3. - Anton Zakharov, Sep 05 2016
a(n) = (A083706(n-1) + A000325(n))/2. - Miquel Cerda, Sep 30 2016
a(n) = A005803(n) + A005408(n-1). - Miquel Cerda, Nov 25 2016
a(n) = A279396(n+2,2). - Wolfdieter Lang, Jan 10 2017
a(n) = n + Sum_{j=1..n-1} (n-j)*2^(j-1). See a Jun 14 2017 formula for A000918(n+1) with an interpretation. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jun 14 2017
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n-1} Sum_{i=0..n-1} C(k,i). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Sep 21 2017
a(n+m) = a(n)*a(m) + a(n) + a(m). - Yuchun Ji, Jul 27 2018
a(n+m) = a(n+1)*a(m) - 2*a(n)*a(m-1). - Taras Goy, Dec 23 2018
a(n+1) is the determinant of n X n matrix M_(i, j) = binomial(i + j - 1, j)*2 + binomial(i+j-1, i) (empirical observation). - Tony Foster III, May 11 2019
From Peter Bala, Jun 27 2025: (Start)
For n >= 1, a(3*n)/a(n) = A001576(n), a(4*n)/a(n) = A034496(n), a(5*n)/a(n) = A020514(n) a(6*n)/a(n) = A034665(n), a(7*n)/a(n) = A020516(n) and a(8*n)/a(n) = A034674(n).
exp( Sum_{n >= 1} a(2*n)/a(n)*x^n/n ) = Sum_{n >= 0} a(n+1)*x^n.
Modulo differences in offsets, exp( Sum_{n >= 1} a(k*n)/a(n)*x^n/n ) is the o.g.f. of A006095 (k = 3), A006096 (k = 4), A006097 (k = 5), A006110 (k = 6), A022189 (k = 7), A022190 (k = 8), A022191 (k = 9) and A022192 (k = 10).
The following are all examples of telescoping series:
Sum_{n >= 1} 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+1)) = 1; Sum_{n >= 1} 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+1)*a(n+2)) = 1/9.
In general, for k >= 1, Sum_{n >= 1} 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+1)*...*a(n+k)) = 1/(a(1)*a(2)*...*a(k)*a(k)).
Sum_{n >= 1} 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+2)) = 4/9, since 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+2)) = b(n) - b(n+1), where b(n) = (2/3)*(3*2^(n-1) - 1)/((2^(n+1) - 1)*(2^n - 1)).
Sum_{n >= 1} (-2)^n/(a(n)*a(n+2)) = -2/9, since (-2)^n/(a(n)*a(n+2)) = c(n) - c(n+1), where c(n) = (1/3)*(-2)^n/((2^(n+1) - 1)*(2^n - 1)).
Sum_{n >= 1} 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+4)) = 18/175, since 2^n/(a(n)*a(n+4)) = d(n) - d(n+1), where d(n) = (120*8^n - 140*4^n + 45*2^n - 4)/(15*(2^n - 1)*(2^(n+1) - 1)*(2^(n+2) - 1)*(2^(n+3) - 1)).
Sum_{n >= 1} (-2)^n/(a(n)*a(n+4)) = -26/525, since (-2)^n/(a(n)*a(n+4)) = e(n) - e(n+1), where e(n) = (-1)^n*(40*8^n - 24*4^n + 5*2^n)/(15*(2^n - 1)*(2^(n+1) - 1)*(2^(n+2) - 1)*(2^(n+3) - 1)). (End)

Extensions

Name partially edited by Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 04 2021

A008277 Triangle of Stirling numbers of the second kind, S2(n,k), n >= 1, 1 <= k <= n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 3, 1, 1, 7, 6, 1, 1, 15, 25, 10, 1, 1, 31, 90, 65, 15, 1, 1, 63, 301, 350, 140, 21, 1, 1, 127, 966, 1701, 1050, 266, 28, 1, 1, 255, 3025, 7770, 6951, 2646, 462, 36, 1, 1, 511, 9330, 34105, 42525, 22827, 5880, 750, 45, 1, 1, 1023, 28501, 145750, 246730, 179487, 63987, 11880, 1155, 55, 1
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Also known as Stirling set numbers and written {n, k}.
S2(n,k) counts partitions of an n-set into k nonempty subsets.
From Manfred Boergens, Apr 07 2025: (Start)
With regard to the preceding comment:
For disjoint collections of subsets see A256894.
For arbitrary collections of subsets see A163353.
For arbitrary collections of nonempty subsets see A055154. (End)
Triangle S2(n,k), 1 <= k <= n, read by rows, given by [0, 1, 0, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0, 5, 0, 6, ...] DELTA [1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, ...] where DELTA is Deléham's operator defined in A084938.
Number of partitions of {1, ..., n+1} into k+1 nonempty subsets of nonconsecutive integers, including the partition 1|2|...|n+1 if n=k. E.g., S2(3,2)=3 since the number of partitions of {1,2,3,4} into three subsets of nonconsecutive integers is 3, i.e., 13|2|4, 14|2|3, 1|24|3. - Augustine O. Munagi, Mar 20 2005
Draw n cards (with replacement) from a deck of k cards. Let prob(n,k) be the probability that each card was drawn at least once. Then prob(n,k) = S2(n,k)*k!/k^n (see A090582). - Rainer Rosenthal, Oct 22 2005
Define f_1(x), f_2(x), ..., such that f_1(x)=e^x and for n = 2, 3, ..., f_{n+1}(x) = (d/dx)(x*f_n(x)). Then f_n(x) = e^x*Sum_{k=1..n} S2(n,k)*x^(k-1). - Milan Janjic, May 30 2008
From Peter Bala, Oct 03 2008: (Start)
For tables of restricted Stirling numbers of the second kind see A143494 - A143496.
S2(n,k) gives the number of 'patterns' of words of length n using k distinct symbols - see [Cooper & Kennedy] for an exact definition of the term 'pattern'. As an example, the words AADCBB and XXEGTT, both of length 6, have the same pattern of letters. The five patterns of words of length 3 are AAA, AAB, ABA, BAA and ABC giving row 3 of this table as (1,3,1).
Equivalently, S2(n,k) gives the number of sequences of positive integers (N_1,...,N_n) of length n, with k distinct entries, such that N_1 = 1 and N_(i+1) <= 1 + max{j = 1..i} N_j for i >= 1 (restricted growth functions). For example, Stirling(4,2) = 7 since the sequences of length 4 having 2 distinct entries that satisfy the conditions are (1,1,1,2), (1,1,2,1), (1,2,1,1), (1,1,2,2), (1,2,2,2), (1,2,2,1) and (1,2,1,2).
(End)
Number of combinations of subsets in the plane. - Mats Granvik, Jan 13 2009
S2(n+1,k+1) is the number of size k collections of pairwise disjoint, nonempty subsets of [n]. For example: S2(4,3)=6 because there are six such collections of subsets of [3] that have cardinality two: {(1)(23)},{(12)(3)}, {(13)(2)}, {(1)(2)}, {(1)(3)}, {(2)(3)}. - Geoffrey Critzer, Apr 06 2009
Consider a set of A000217(n) balls of n colors in which, for each integer k = 1 to n, exactly one color appears in the set a total of k times. (Each ball has exactly one color and is indistinguishable from other balls of the same color.) a(n+1, k+1) equals the number of ways to choose 0 or more balls of each color in such a way that exactly (n-k) colors are chosen at least once, and no two colors are chosen the same positive number of times. - Matthew Vandermast, Nov 22 2010
S2(n,k) is the number of monotonic-labeled forests on n vertices with exactly k rooted trees, each of height one or less. See link "Counting forests with Stirling and Bell numbers" below. - Dennis P. Walsh, Nov 16 2011
If D is the operator d/dx, and E the operator xd/dx, Stirling numbers are given by: E^n = Sum_{k=1..n} S2(n,k) * x^k*D^k. - Hyunwoo Jang, Dec 13 2011
The Stirling polynomials of the second kind (a.k.a. the Bell / Touchard polynomials) are the umbral compositional inverses of the falling factorials (a.k.a. the Pochhammer symbol or Stirling polynomials of the first kind), i.e., binomial(Bell(.,x),n) = x^n/n! (cf. Copeland's 2007 formulas), implying binomial(xD,n) = binomial(Bell(.,:xD:),n) = :xD:^n/n! where D = d/dx and :xD:^n = x^n*D^n. - Tom Copeland, Apr 17 2014
S2(n,k) is the number of ways to nest n matryoshkas (Russian nesting dolls) so that exactly k matryoshkas are not contained in any other matryoshka. - Carlo Sanna, Oct 17 2015
The row polynomials R(n, x) = Sum_{k=1..n} S2(n, k)*x^k appear in the numerator of the e.g.f. of n-th powers, E(n, x) = Sum_{m>=0} m^n*x^m/m!, as E(n, x) = exp(x)*x*R(n, x), for n >= 1. - Wolfdieter Lang, Apr 02 2017
With offsets 0 for n and k this is the Sheffer product matrix A007318*A048993 denoted by (exp(t), (exp(t) - 1)) with e.g.f. exp(t)*exp(x*(exp(t) - 1)). - Wolfdieter Lang, Jun 20 2017
Number of words on k+1 unlabeled letters of length n+1 with no repeated letters. - Thomas Anton, Mar 14 2019
Also coefficients of moments of Poisson distribution about the origin expressed as polynomials in lambda. [Haight] (see also A331155). - N. J. A. Sloane, Jan 14 2020
k!*S2(n,k) is the number of surjections from an n-element set to a k-element set. - Jianing Song, Jun 01 2022

Examples

			The triangle S2(n, k) begins:
\ k    1       2       3        4         5         6         7         8        9
n \   10      11      12       13        14        15       ...
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1  |   1
2  |   1       1
3  |   1       3       1
4  |   1       7       6        1
5  |   1      15      25       10         1
6  |   1      31      90       65        15         1
7  |   1      63     301      350       140        21         1
8  |   1     127     966     1701      1050       266        28         1
9  |   1     255    3025     7770      6951      2646       462        36        1
10 |   1     511    9330    34105     42525     22827      5880       750       45
       1
11 |   1    1023   28501   145750    246730    179487     63987     11880     1155
      55       1
12 |   1    2047   86526   611501   1379400   1323652    627396    159027    22275
    1705      66       1
13 |   1    4095  261625  2532530   7508501   9321312   5715424   1899612   359502
   39325    2431      78        1
14 |   1    8191  788970 10391745  40075035  63436373  49329280  20912320  5135130
  752752   66066    3367       91         1
15 |   1   16383 2375101 42355950 210766920 420693273 408741333 216627840 67128490
12662650 1479478  106470     4550       105         1
...
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
x^4 = 1 x_(1) + 7 x_(2) + 6 x_(3) + 1 x_(4), where x_(k) = P(x,k) = k!*C(x,k). - _Daniel Forgues_, Jan 16 2016
		

References

  • M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards Applied Math. Series 55, 1964 (and various reprintings), p. 835.
  • A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, p. 103ff.
  • B. A. Bondarenko, Generalized Pascal Triangles and Pyramids (in Russian), FAN, Tashkent, 1990, ISBN 5-648-00738-8.
  • G. Boole, Finite Differences, 5th ed. New York, NY: Chelsea, 1970.
  • C. A. Charalambides, Enumerative Combinatorics, Chapman & Hall/CRC, 2002, Theorem 8.11, pp. 298-299.
  • L. Comtet, Advanced Combinatorics, Reidel, 1974, p. 310.
  • J. H. Conway and R. K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, Springer, p. 92.
  • F. N. David, M. G. Kendall, and D. E. Barton, Symmetric Function and Allied Tables, Cambridge, 1966, p. 223.
  • S.N. Elaydi, An Introduction to Difference Equations, 3rd ed. Springer, 2005.
  • H. H. Goldstine, A History of Numerical Analysis, Springer-Verlag, 1977; Section 2.7.
  • R. L. Graham, D. E. Knuth, and O. Patashnik, Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1990, p. 244.
  • Frank Avery Haight, Handbook of the Poisson distribution, John Wiley, 1967. See pages 6,7.
  • A. D. Korshunov, Asymptotic behavior of Stirling numbers of the second kind. (Russian) Metody Diskret. Analiz. No. 39 (1983), 24-41.
  • E. Kuz'min and A. I. Shirshov: On the number e, pp. 111-119, eq.(6), in: Kvant Selecta: Algebra and Analysis, I, ed. S. Tabachnikov, Am.Math.Soc., 1999, p. 116, eq. (11).
  • J. Riordan, An Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis, p. 48.
  • J. Stirling, The Differential Method, London, 1749; see p. 7.

Crossrefs

Cf. A008275 (Stirling numbers of first kind), A048993 (another version of this triangle).
See also A331155.
Cf. A000110 (row sums), A102661 (partial row sums).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a008277 n k = a008277_tabl !! (n-1) !! (k-1)
    a008277_row n = a008277_tabl !! (n-1)
    a008277_tabl = map tail $ a048993_tabl  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 26 2012
    
  • J
    n ((] (1 % !)) * +/@((^~ * (] (1 ^ |.)) * (! {:)@]) i.@>:)) k NB. _Stephen Makdisi, Apr 06 2016
    
  • Magma
    [[StirlingSecond(n,k): k in [1..n]]: n in [1..12]]; // G. C. Greubel, May 22 2019
  • Maple
    seq(seq(combinat[stirling2](n, k), k=1..n), n=1..10); # Zerinvary Lajos, Jun 02 2007
    stirling_2 := (n,k) -> (1/k!) * add((-1)^(k-i)*binomial(k,i)*i^n, i=0..k);
  • Mathematica
    Table[StirlingS2[n, k], {n, 11}, {k, n}] // Flatten (* Robert G. Wilson v, May 23 2006 *)
    BellMatrix[f_, len_] := With[{t = Array[f, len, 0]}, Table[BellY[n, k, t], {n, 0, len - 1}, {k, 0, len - 1}]];
    rows = 12;
    B = BellMatrix[1&, rows];
    Table[B[[n, k]], {n, 2, rows}, {k, 2, n}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Jun 28 2018, after Peter Luschny *)
    a[n_, n_] := 1; a[n_, 1] := 1;
    a[n_, k_] := a[n, k] = a[n-1, k-1] + k a[n-1, k]; Flatten@
    Table[a[n, k], {n, 1, 11}, {k, 1, n}] (* Oliver Seipel, Jun 12 2024 *)
    With[{m = 11},
     Flatten@MapIndexed[Take[#, #2[[1]]] &,
       Transpose@
        Table[Range[1, m]! Coefficient[(E^x-1)^k/k! + O[x]^(m+1), x,
    Range[1, m]], {k, 1, m}]]] (* Oliver Seipel, Jun 12 2024 *)
  • Maxima
    create_list(stirling2(n+1,k+1),n,0,30,k,0,n); /* Emanuele Munarini, Jun 01 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    for(n=1,22,for(k=1,n,print1(stirling(n,k,2),", "));print()); \\ Joerg Arndt, Apr 21 2013
    
  • PARI
    Stirling2(n,k)=sum(i=0,k,(-1)^i*binomial(k,i)*i^n)*(-1)^k/k!  \\ M. F. Hasler, Mar 06 2012
    
  • Sage
    stirling_number2 # Danny Rorabaugh, Oct 11 2015
    

Formula

S2(n, k) = k*S2(n-1, k) + S2(n-1, k-1), n > 1. S2(1, k) = 0, k > 1. S2(1, 1) = 1.
E.g.f.: A(x, y) = e^(y*e^x-y). E.g.f. for m-th column: (e^x-1)^m/m!.
S2(n, k) = (1/k!) * Sum_{i=0..k} (-1)^(k-i)*binomial(k, i)*i^n.
Row sums: Bell number A000110(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} S2(n, k), n>0.
S(n, k) = Sum (i_1*i_2*...*i_(n-k)) summed over all (n-k)-combinations {i_1, i_2, ..., i_k} with repetitions of the numbers {1, 2, ..., k}. Also S(n, k) = Sum (1^(r_1)*2^(r_2)*...* k^(r_k)) summed over integers r_j >= 0, for j=1..k, with Sum{j=1..k} r_j = n-k. [Charalambides]. - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 15 2019.
A019538(n, k) = k! * S2(n, k).
A028248(n, k) = (k-1)! * S2(n, k).
For asymptotics see Hsu (1948), among other sources.
Sum_{n>=0} S2(n, k)*x^n = x^k/((1-x)(1-2x)(1-3x)...(1-kx)).
Let P(n) = the number of integer partitions of n (A000041), p(i) = the number of parts of the i-th partition of n, d(i) = the number of distinct parts of the i-th partition of n, p(j, i) = the j-th part of the i-th partition of n, m(i, j) = multiplicity of the j-th part of the i-th partition of n, and Sum_{i=1..P(n), p(i)=m} = sum running from i=1 to i=P(n) but taking only partitions with p(i)=m parts into account. Then S2(n, m) = Sum_{i=1..P(n), p(i)=m} n!/(Product_{j=1..p(i)} p(i, j)!) * 1/(Product_{j=1..d(i)} m(i, j)!). For example, S2(6, 3) = 90 because n=6 has the following partitions with m=3 parts: (114), (123), (222). Their complexions are: (114): 6!/(1!*1!*4!) * 1/(2!*1!) = 15, (123): 6!/(1!*2!*3!) * 1/(1!*1!*1!) = 60, (222): 6!/(2!*2!*2!) * 1/(3!) = 15. The sum of the complexions is 15+60+15 = 90 = S2(6, 3). - Thomas Wieder, Jun 02 2005
Sum_{k=1..n} k*S2(n,k) = B(n+1)-B(n), where B(q) are the Bell numbers (A000110). - Emeric Deutsch, Nov 01 2006
Recurrence: S2(n+1,k) = Sum_{i=0..n} binomial(n,i)*S2(i,k-1). With the starting conditions S2(n,k) = 1 for n = 0 or k = 1 and S2(n,k) = 0 for k = 0 we have the closely related recurrence S2(n,k) = Sum_{i=k..n} binomial(n-1,i-1)*S2(i-1,k-1). - Thomas Wieder, Jan 27 2007
Representation of Stirling numbers of the second kind S2(n,k), n=1,2,..., k=1,2,...,n, as special values of hypergeometric function of type (n)F(n-1): S2(n,k)= (-1)^(k-1)*hypergeom([ -k+1,2,2,...,2],[1,1,...,1],1)/(k-1)!, i.e., having n parameters in the numerator: one equal to -k+1 and n-1 parameters all equal to 2; and having n-1 parameters in the denominator all equal to 1 and the value of the argument equal to 1. Example: S2(6,k)= seq(evalf((-1)^(k-1)*hypergeom([ -k+1,2,2,2,2,2],[1,1,1,1,1],1)/(k-1)!),k=1..6)=1,31,90,65,15,1. - Karol A. Penson, Mar 28 2007
From Tom Copeland, Oct 10 2007: (Start)
Bell_n(x) = Sum_{j=0..n} S2(n,j) * x^j = Sum_{j=0..n} E(n,j) * Lag(n,-x, j-n) = Sum_{j=0..n} (E(n,j)/n!) * (n!*Lag(n,-x, j-n)) = Sum_{j=0..n} E(n,j) * binomial(Bell.(x)+j, n) umbrally where Bell_n(x) are the Bell / Touchard / exponential polynomials; S2(n,j), the Stirling numbers of the second kind; E(n,j), the Eulerian numbers; and Lag(n,x,m), the associated Laguerre polynomials of order m.
For x = 0, the equation gives Sum_{j=0..n} E(n,j) * binomial(j,n) = 1 for n=0 and 0 for all other n. By substituting the umbral compositional inverse of the Bell polynomials, the lower factorial n!*binomial(y,n), for x in the equation, the Worpitzky identity is obtained; y^n = Sum_{j=0..n} E(n,j) * binomial(y+j,n).
Note that E(n,j)/n! = E(n,j)/(Sum_{k=0..n}E(n,k)). Also (n!*Lag(n, -1, j-n)) is A086885 with a simple combinatorial interpretation in terms of seating arrangements, giving a combinatorial interpretation to the equation for x=1; n!*Bell_n(1) = n!*Sum_{j=0..n} S2(n,j) = Sum_{j=0..n} E(n,j) * (n!*Lag(n, -1, j-n)).
(Appended Sep 16 2020) For connections to the Bernoulli numbers, extensions, proofs, and a clear presentation of the number arrays involved in the identities above, see my post Reciprocity and Umbral Witchcraft. (End)
n-th row = leftmost column of nonzero terms of A127701^(n-1). Also, (n+1)-th row of the triangle = A127701 * n-th row; deleting the zeros. Example: A127701 * [1, 3, 1, 0, 0, 0, ...] = [1, 7, 6, 1, 0, 0, 0, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 21 2007
The row polynomials are given by D^n(e^(x*t)) evaluated at x = 0, where D is the operator (1+x)*d/dx. Cf. A147315 and A094198. See also A185422. - Peter Bala, Nov 25 2011
Let f(x) = e^(e^x). Then for n >= 1, 1/f(x)*(d/dx)^n(f(x)) = 1/f(x)*(d/dx)^(n-1)(e^x*f(x)) = Sum_{k=1..n} S2(n,k)*e^(k*x). Similar formulas hold for A039755, A105794, A111577, A143494 and A154537. - Peter Bala, Mar 01 2012
S2(n,k) = A048993(n,k), 1 <= k <= n. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 26 2012
O.g.f. for the n-th diagonal is D^n(x), where D is the operator x/(1-x)*d/dx. - Peter Bala, Jul 02 2012
n*i!*S2(n-1,i) = Sum_{j=(i+1)..n} (-1)^(j-i+1)*j!/(j-i)*S2(n,j). - Leonid Bedratyuk, Aug 19 2012
G.f.: (1/Q(0)-1)/(x*y), where Q(k) = 1 - (y+k)*x - (k+1)*y*x^2/Q(k+1); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Nov 09 2013
From Tom Copeland, Apr 17 2014: (Start)
Multiply each n-th diagonal of the Pascal lower triangular matrix by x^n and designate the result as A007318(x) = P(x).
With Bell(n,x)=B(n,x) defined above, D = d/dx, and :xD:^n = x^n*D^n, a Dobinski formula gives umbrally f(y)^B(.,x) = e^(-x)*e^(f(y)*x). Then f(y)^B(.,:xD:)g(x) = [f(y)^(xD)]g(x) = e^[-(1-f(y)):xD:]g(x) = g[f(y)x].
In particular, for f(y) = (1+y),
A) (1+y)^B(.,x) = e^(-x)*e^((1+y)*x) = e^(x*y) = e^[log(1+y)B(.,x)],
B) (I+dP)^B(.,x) = e^(x*dP) = P(x) = e^[x*(e^M-I)]= e^[M*B(.,x)] with dP = A132440, M = A238385-I = log(I+dP), and I = identity matrix, and
C) (1+dP)^(xD) = e^(dP:xD:) = P(:xD:) = e^[(e^M-I):xD:] = e^[M*xD] with action e^(dP:xD:)g(x) = g[(I+dP)*x].
D) P(x)^m = P(m*x), which implies (Sum_{k=1..m} a_k)^j = B(j,m*x) where the sum is umbrally evaluated only after exponentiation with (a_k)^q = B(.,x)^q = B(q,x). E.g., (a1+a2+a3)^2=a1^2+a2^2+a3^2+2(a1*a2+a1*a3+a2*a3) = 3*B(2,x)+6*B(1,x)^2 = 9x^2+3x = B(2,3x).
E) P(x)^2 = P(2x) = e^[M*B(.,2x)] = A038207(x), the face vectors of the n-Dim hypercubes.
(End)
As a matrix equivalent of some inversions mentioned above, A008277*A008275 = I, the identity matrix, regarded as lower triangular matrices. - Tom Copeland, Apr 26 2014
O.g.f. for the n-th diagonal of the triangle (n = 0,1,2,...): Sum_{k>=0} k^(k+n)*(x*e^(-x))^k/k!. Cf. the generating functions of the diagonals of A039755. Also cf. A112492. - Peter Bala, Jun 22 2014
Floor(1/(-1 + Sum_{n>=k} 1/S2(n,k))) = A034856(k-1), for k>=2. The fractional portion goes to zero at large k. - Richard R. Forberg, Jan 17 2015
From Daniel Forgues, Jan 16 2016: (Start)
Let x_(n), called a factorial term (Boole, 1970) or a factorial polynomial (Elaydi, 2005: p. 60), denote the falling factorial Product_{k=0..n-1} (x-k). Then, for n >= 1, x_(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} A008275(n,k) * x^k, x^n = Sum_{k=1..n} T(n,k) * x_(k), where A008275(n,k) are Stirling numbers of the first kind.
For n >= 1, the row sums yield the exponential numbers (or Bell numbers): Sum_{k=1..n} T(n,k) = A000110(n), and Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^(n+k) * T(n,k) = (-1)^n * Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^k * T(n,k) = (-1)^n * A000587(n), where A000587 are the complementary Bell numbers. (End)
Sum_{k=1..n} k*S2(n,k) = A138378(n). - Alois P. Heinz, Jan 07 2022
O.g.f. for the m-th column: x^m/(Product_{j=1..m} 1-j*x). - Daniel Checa, Aug 25 2022
S2(n,k) ~ (k^n)/k!, for fixed k as n->oo. - Daniel Checa, Nov 08 2022
S2(2n+k, n) ~ (2^(2n+k-1/2) * n^(n+k-1/2)) / (sqrt(Pi*(1-c)) * exp(n) * c^n * (2-c)^(n+k)), where c = -LambertW(-2 * exp(-2)). - Miko Labalan, Dec 21 2024
From Mikhail Kurkov, Mar 05 2025: (Start)
For a general proof of the formulas below via generating functions, see Mathematics Stack Exchange link.
Recursion for the n-th row (independently of other rows): T(n,k) = 1/(n-k)*Sum_{j=2..n-k+1} (j-2)!*binomial(-k,j)*T(n,k+j-1) for 1 <= k < n with T(n,n) = 1 (see Fedor Petrov link).
Recursion for the k-th column (independently of other columns): T(n,k) = 1/(n-k)*Sum_{j=2..n-k+1} binomial(n,j)*T(n-j+1,k)*(-1)^j for 1 <= k < n with T(n,n) = 1. (End)

A001242 Differences of reciprocals of unity.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 274, 48076, 6998824, 929081776, 117550462624, 14500866102976, 1765130436471424, 213373597575314176, 25700650466807540224, 3089923562153380965376, 371145495540181143169024, 44558899569395347436056576, 5348360831598738338465357824
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

References

  • F. N. David, M. G. Kendall and D. E. Barton, Symmetric Function and Allied Tables, Cambridge, 1966, p. 228.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

Equals 2^(n-1) * A103878(n).
Right-hand column 4 in triangle A008969.
Cf. a(n) = A112492(n+3, 5).

Programs

  • PARI
    Vec(1/(-207360000*x^5+25920000*x^4-1224000*x^3+27000*x^2-274*x+1) + O(x^100)) \\ Colin Barker, Apr 26 2015

Formula

G.f.: x / ((1-24*x)*(1-30*x)*(1-40*x)*(1-60*x)*(1-120*x)).
a(n) = (1/24) (24^n - 4*30^n + 6*40^n - 4*60^n + 120^n).

Extensions

Formulae and more terms from Ralf Stephan, Feb 20 2005

A001240 Expansion of 1/((1-2x)(1-3x)(1-6x)).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 11, 85, 575, 3661, 22631, 137845, 833375, 5019421, 30174551, 181222405, 1087861775, 6528756781, 39177307271, 235078159765, 1410511939775, 8463200647741, 50779591044791, 304678708005925
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Differences of reciprocals of unity.

References

  • F. N. David, M. G. Kendall and D. E. Barton, Symmetric Function and Allied Tables, Cambridge, 1966, p. 228.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

Right-hand column 2 in triangle A008969.
a(n) = A112492(n+1, 3).
Cf. A021029 (partial sums).

Programs

  • Maple
    A001240:=-1/((6*z-1)*(3*z-1)*(2*z-1)); # conjectured (correctly) by Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
  • Mathematica
    CoefficientList[Series[1/((1-2x)(1-3x)(1-6x)),{x,0,25}],x] (* or *) LinearRecurrence[{11,-36,36},{1,11,85},25] (* Harvey P. Dale, May 15 2011 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=(6^n-2*3^n+2^n)/2 \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Feb 19 2017

Formula

a(n) = 11a(n-1) - 36a(n-2) + 36a(n-3). - John W. Layman
a(n) = (6^n - 2*3^n + 2^n)/2. Also -x^2/6*Beta(x, 4) = Sum_{n>=0} a(n)*(-x/6)^n. Thus x^2*Beta(x, 4) = x - 11/6*x^2 + 85/36*x^3 - 575/216*x^4 + 3661/1296*x^5 - ... . - Vladeta Jovovic, Aug 09 2002
a(n) = Sum_{0<=i,j,k,<=n, i+j+k=n} 2^i*3^j*6^k. - Hieronymus Fischer, Jun 25 2007
a(n) = 2^n + 3^(n+1)*(2^n-1). - Hieronymus Fischer, Jun 25 2007
a(n) = Sum_{k = 0..n-1} 2^(n-2-k) * (3^n - 3^k). - J. M. Bergot, Feb 05 2018

A001241 Differences of reciprocals of unity.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 50, 1660, 46760, 1217776, 30480800, 747497920, 18139003520, 437786795776, 10536798272000, 253246254177280, 6082300519393280, 146028165842661376, 3505313580591718400, 84135194495708938240, 2019336829962040279040
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

References

  • F. N. David, M. G. Kendall and D. E. Barton, Symmetric Function and Allied Tables, Cambridge, 1966, p. 228.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

Equals 2^(n-1) * A028037(n-1).
Right-hand column 3 in triangle A008969.
a(n) = A112492(n+2, 4).

Programs

  • Maple
    A001241:=1/(6*z-1)/(8*z-1)/(12*z-1)/(24*z-1); [Conjectured by Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation.]

Formula

G.f.: x / ((1-6*x)*(1-8*x)*(1-12*x)*(1-24*x)).
a(n) = (1/6)*(-6^n + 3*8^n - 3*12^n + 24^n).

Extensions

Formulae and more terms from Ralf Stephan, Feb 20 2005

A112001 One fourth of fourth column (k=3) of triangle A111999.

Original entry on oeis.org

6, -231, 6608, -176330, 4714710, -130014885, 3745101360, -113311778580, 3608430175350, -120977128347075, 4267052705916000, -158151857368254750, 6150573832264611750, -250598489767931930625, 10680148143520635780000, -475373543975596731465000
Offset: 0

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Author

Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 12 2005

Keywords

Formula

a(n)=A112492(n+4, 3)/4, n>=0.
Conjecture: +n*(20*n^2+75*n+67)*a(n) +(2*n+5)*(n+2)*(20*n^2+115*n+162)*a(n-1)=0. - R. J. Mathar, Jul 09 2017
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