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.

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A094587 Triangle of permutation coefficients arranged with 1's on the diagonal. Also, triangle of permutations on n letters with exactly k+1 cycles and with the first k+1 letters in separate cycles.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 1, 6, 6, 3, 1, 24, 24, 12, 4, 1, 120, 120, 60, 20, 5, 1, 720, 720, 360, 120, 30, 6, 1, 5040, 5040, 2520, 840, 210, 42, 7, 1, 40320, 40320, 20160, 6720, 1680, 336, 56, 8, 1, 362880, 362880, 181440, 60480, 15120, 3024, 504, 72, 9, 1, 3628800, 3628800
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Paul Barry, May 13 2004

Keywords

Comments

Also, table of Pochhammer sequences read by antidiagonals (see Rudolph-Lilith, 2015). - N. J. A. Sloane, Mar 31 2016
Reverse of A008279. Row sums are A000522. Diagonal sums are A003470. Rows of inverse matrix begin {1}, {-1,1}, {0,-2,1}, {0,0,-3,1}, {0,0,0,-4,1} ... The signed lower triangular matrix (-1)^(n+k)n!/k! has as row sums the signed rencontres numbers Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^(n+k)n!/k!. (See A000166). It has matrix inverse 1 1,1 0,2,1 0,0,3,1 0,0,0,4,1,...
Exponential Riordan array [1/(1-x),x]; column k has e.g.f. x^k/(1-x). - Paul Barry, Mar 27 2007
From Tom Copeland, Nov 01 2007: (Start)
T is the umbral extension of n!*Lag[n,(.)!*Lag[.,x,-1],0] = (1-D)^(-1) x^n = (-1)^n * n! * Lag(n,x,-1-n) = Sum_{j=0..n} binomial(n,j) * j! * x^(n-j) = Sum_{j=0..n} (n!/j!) x^j. The inverse operator is A132013 with generalizations discussed in A132014.
b = T*a can be characterized several ways in terms of a(n) and b(n) or their o.g.f.'s A(x) and B(x).
1) b(n) = n! Lag[n,(.)!*Lag[.,a(.),-1],0], umbrally,
2) b(n) = (-1)^n n! Lag(n,a(.),-1-n)
3) b(n) = Sum_{j=0..n} (n!/j!) a(j)
4) B(x) = (1-xDx)^(-1) A(x), formally
5) B(x) = Sum_{j=0,1,...} (xDx)^j A(x)
6) B(x) = Sum_{j=0,1,...} x^j * D^j * x^j A(x)
7) B(x) = Sum_{j=0,1,...} j! * x^j * L(j,-:xD:,0) A(x) where Lag(n,x,m) are the Laguerre polynomials of order m, D the derivative w.r.t. x and (:xD:)^j = x^j * D^j. Truncating the operator series at the j = n term gives an o.g.f. for b(0) through b(n).
c = (0!,1!,2!,3!,4!,...) is the sequence associated to T under the list partition transform and the associated operations described in A133314 so T(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*c(n-k). The reciprocal sequence is d = (1,-1,0,0,0,...). (End)
From Peter Bala, Jul 10 2008: (Start)
This array is the particular case P(1,1) of the generalized Pascal triangle P(a,b), a lower unit triangular matrix, shown below:
n\k|0.....................1...............2.......3......4
----------------------------------------------------------
0..|1.....................................................
1..|a....................1................................
2..|a(a+b)...............2a..............1................
3..|a(a+b)(a+2b).........3a(a+b).........3a........1......
4..|a(a+b)(a+2b)(a+3b)...4a(a+b)(a+2b)...6a(a+b)...4a....1
...
The entries A(n,k) of this array satisfy the recursion A(n,k) = (a+b*(n-k-1))*A(n-1,k) + A(n-1,k-1), which reduces to the Pascal formula when a = 1, b = 0.
Various cases are recorded in the database, including: P(1,0) = Pascal's triangle A007318, P(2,0) = A038207, P(3,0) = A027465, P(2,1) = A132159, P(1,3) = A136215 and P(2,3) = A136216.
When b <> 0 the array P(a,b) has e.g.f. exp(x*y)/(1-b*y)^(a/b) = 1 + (a+x)*y + (a*(a+b)+2a*x+x^2)*y^2/2! + (a*(a+b)*(a+2b) + 3a*(a+b)*x + 3a*x^2+x^3)*y^3/3! + ...; the array P(a,0) has e.g.f. exp((x+a)*y).
We have the matrix identities P(a,b)*P(a',b) = P(a+a',b); P(a,b)^-1 = P(-a,b).
An analog of the binomial expansion for the row entries of P(a,b) has been proved by [Echi]. Introduce a (generally noncommutative and nonassociative) product ** on the ring of polynomials in two variables by defining F(x,y)**G(x,y) = F(x,y)G(x,y) + by^2*d/dy(G(x,y)).
Define the iterated product F^(n)(x,y) of a polynomial F(x,y) by setting F^(1) = F(x,y) and F^(n)(x,y) = F(x,y)**F^(n-1)(x,y) for n >= 2. Then (x+a*y)^(n) = x^n + C(n,1)*a*x^(n-1)*y + C(n,2)*a*(a+b)*x^(n-2)*y^2 + ... + C(n,n)*a*(a+b)*(a+2b)*...*(a+(n-1)b)*y^n. (End)
(n+1) * n-th row = reversal of triangle A068424: (1; 2,2; 6,6,3; ...) - Gary W. Adamson, May 03 2009
Let G(m, k, p) = (-p)^k*Product_{j=0..k-1}(j - m - 1/p) and T(n,k,p) = G(n-1,n-k,p) then T(n, k, 1) is this sequence, T(n, k, 2) = A112292(n, k) and T(n, k, 3) = A136214. - Peter Luschny, Jun 01 2009, revised Jun 18 2019
The higher order exponential integrals E(x,m,n) are defined in A163931. For a discussion of the asymptotic expansions of the E(x,m=1,n) ~ (exp(-x)/x)*(1 - n/x + (n^2+n)/x^2 - (2*n+3*n^2+n^3)/x^3 + (6*n+11*n^2+6*n^3+n^4)/x^3 - ...) see A130534. The asymptotic expansion of E(x,m=1,n) leads for n >= 1 to the left hand columns of the triangle given above. Triangle A165674 is generated by the asymptotic expansions of E(x,m=2,n). - Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 07 2009
T(n,k) = n!/k! = number of permutations of [n+1] with exactly k+1 cycles and with elements 1,2,...,k+1 in separate cycles. See link and example below. - Dennis P. Walsh, Jan 24 2011
T(n,k) is the number of n permutations that leave some size k subset of {1,2,...,n} fixed. Sum_{k=0..n}(-1)^k*T(n,k) = A000166(n) (the derangements). - Geoffrey Critzer, Dec 11 2011
T(n,k) = A162995(n-1,k-1), 2 <= k <= n; T(n,k) = A173333(n,k), 1 <= k <= n. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 05 2012
The row polynomials form an Appell sequence. The matrix is a special case of a group of general matrices sketched in A132382. - Tom Copeland, Dec 03 2013
For interpretations in terms of colored necklaces, see A213936 and A173333. - Tom Copeland, Aug 18 2016
See A008279 for a relation of this entry to the e.g.f.s enumerating the faces of permutahedra and stellahedra. - Tom Copeland, Nov 14 2016
Also, T(n,k) is the number of ways to arrange n-k nonattacking rooks on the n X (n-k) chessboard. - Andrey Zabolotskiy, Dec 16 2016
The infinitesimal generator of this triangle is the generalized exponential Riordan array [-log(1-x), x] and equals the unsigned version of A238363. - Peter Bala, Feb 13 2017
Formulas for exponential and power series infinitesimal generators for this triangle T are given in Copeland's 2012 and 2014 formulas as T = unsigned exp[(I-A238385)] = 1/(I - A132440), where I is the identity matrix. - Tom Copeland, Jul 03 2017
If A(0) = 1/(1-x), and A(n) = d/dx(A(n-1)), then A(n) = n!/(1-x)^(n+1) = Sum_{k>=0} (n+k)!/k!*x^k = Sum_{k>=0} T(n+k, k)*x^k. - Michael Somos, Sep 19 2021

Examples

			Rows begin {1}, {1,1}, {2,2,1}, {6,6,3,1}, ...
For n=3 and k=1, T(3,1)=6 since there are exactly 6 permutations of {1,2,3,4} with exactly 2 cycles and with 1 and 2 in separate cycles. The permutations are (1)(2 3 4), (1)(2 4 3), (1 3)(2 4), (1 4)(2 3), (1 3 4)(2), and (1 4 3)(2). - _Dennis P. Walsh_, Jan 24 2011
Triangle begins:
     1,
     1,    1,
     2,    2,    1,
     6,    6,    3,    1,
    24,   24,   12,    4,    1,
   120,  120,   60,   20,    5,    1,
   720,  720,  360,  120,   30,    6,    1,
  5040, 5040, 2520,  840,  210,   42,    7,    1
The production matrix is:
      1,     1,
      1,     1,     1,
      2,     2,     1,    1,
      6,     6,     3,    1,    1,
     24,    24,    12,    4,    1,   1,
    120,   120,    60,   20,    5,   1,   1,
    720,   720,   360,  120,   30,   6,   1,   1,
   5040,  5040,  2520,  840,  210,  42,   7,   1,   1,
  40320, 40320, 20160, 6720, 1680, 336,  56,   8,   1,   1
which is the exponential Riordan array A094587, or [1/(1-x),x], with an extra superdiagonal of 1's.
Inverse begins:
   1,
  -1,  1,
   0, -2,  1,
   0,  0, -3,  1,
   0,  0,  0, -4,  1,
   0,  0,  0,  0, -5,  1,
   0,  0,  0,  0,  0, -6,  1,
   0,  0,  0,  0,  0,  0, -7,  1
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Haskell
    a094587 n k = a094587_tabl !! n !! k
    a094587_row n = a094587_tabl !! n
    a094587_tabl = map fst $ iterate f ([1], 1)
       where f (row, i) = (map (* i) row ++ [1], i + 1)
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 04 2012
    
  • Maple
    T := proc(n, m): n!/m! end: seq(seq(T(n, m), m=0..n), n=0..9);  # Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 07 2009, revised Nov 25 2012
    # Alternative: Note that if you leave out 'abs' you get A021009.
    T := proc(n, k) option remember; if n = 0 and k = 0 then 1 elif k < 0 or k > n then 0 else abs((n + k)*T(n-1, k) - T(n-1, k-1)) fi end: #  Peter Luschny, Dec 30 2021
  • Mathematica
    Flatten[Table[Table[n!/k!, {k,0,n}], {n,0,10}]] (* Geoffrey Critzer, Dec 11 2011 *)
  • Sage
    def A094587_row(n): return (factorial(n)*exp(x).taylor(x,0,n)).list()
    for n in (0..7): print(A094587_row(n)) # Peter Luschny, Sep 28 2017

Formula

T(n, k) = n!/k! if n >= k >= 0, otherwise 0.
T(n, k) = Sum_{i=k..n} |S1(n+1, i+1)*S2(i, k)| * (-1)^i, with S1, S2 the Stirling numbers.
T(n,k) = (n-k)*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k-1). E.g.f.: exp(x*y)/(1-y) = 1 + (1+x)*y + (2+2*x+x^2)*y^2/2! + (6+6*x+3*x^2+x^3)*y^3/3!+ ... . - Peter Bala, Jul 10 2008
A094587 = 1 / ((-1)*A129184 * A127648 + I), I = Identity matrix. - Gary W. Adamson, May 03 2009
From Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 07 2009: (Start)
The o.g.f. of right hand column k is Gf(z;k) = (k-1)!/(1-z)^k, k => 1.
The recurrence relations of the right hand columns lead to Pascal's triangle A007318. (End)
Let f(x) = (1/x)*exp(-x). The n-th row polynomial is R(n,x) = (-x)^n/f(x)*(d/dx)^n(f(x)), and satisfies the recurrence equation R(n+1,x) = (x+n+1)*R(n,x)-x*R'(n,x). Cf. A132159. - Peter Bala, Oct 28 2011
A padded shifted version of this lower triangular matrix with zeros in the first column and row except for a one in the diagonal position is given by integral(t=0 to t=infinity) exp[-t(I-P)] = 1/(I-P) = I + P^2 + P^3 + ... where P is the infinitesimal generator matrix A218234 and I the identity matrix. The non-padded version is given by P replaced by A132440. - Tom Copeland, Oct 25 2012
From Peter Bala, Aug 28 2013: (Start)
The row polynomials R(n,x) form a Sheffer sequence of polynomials with associated delta operator equal to d/dx. Thus d/dx(R(n,x)) = n*R(n-1,x). The Sheffer identity is R(n,x + y) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k)*y^(n-k)*R(k,x).
Let P(n,x) = Product_{k=0..n-1} (x + k) denote the rising factorial polynomial sequence with the convention that P(0,x) = 1. Then this is triangle of connection constants when expressing the basis polynomials P(n,x + 1) in terms of the basis P(n,x). For example, row 3 is (6, 6, 3, 1) so P(3,x + 1) = (x + 1)*(x + 2)*(x + 3) = 6 + 6*x + 3*x*(x + 1) + x*(x + 1)*(x + 2). (End)
From Tom Copeland, Apr 21 & 26, and Aug 13 2014: (Start)
T-I = M = -A021009*A132440*A021009 with e.g.f. y*exp(x*y)/(1-y). Cf. A132440. Dividing the n-th row of M by n generates the (n-1)th row of T.
T = 1/(I - A132440) = {2*I - exp[(A238385-I)]}^(-1) = unsigned exp[(I-A238385)] = exp[A000670(.)*(A238385-I)] = , umbrally, where I = identity matrix.
The e.g.f. is exp(x*y)/(1-y), so the row polynomials form an Appell sequence with lowering operator d/dx and raising operator x + 1/(1-D).
With L(n,m,x)= Laguerre polynomials of order m, the row polynomials are (-1)^n*n!*L(n,-1-n,x) = (-1)^n*(-1!/(-1-n)!)*K(-n,-1-n+1,x) = n!* K(-n,-n,x) where K is Kummer's confluent hypergeometric function (as a limit of n+s as s tends to zero).
Operationally, (-1)^n*n!*L(n,-1-n,-:xD:) = (-1)^n*x^(n+1)*:Dx:^n*x^(-1-n) = (-1)^n*x*:xD:^n*x^(-1) = (-1)^n*n!*binomial(xD-1,n) = n!*K(-n,-n,-:xD:) where :AB:^n = A^n*B^n for any two operators. Cf. A235706 and A132159.
The n-th row of signed M has the coefficients of d[(-:xD:)^n]/d(:Dx:)= f[d/d(-:xD:)](-:xD:)^n with f(y)=y/(y-1), :Dx:^n= n!L(n,0,-:xD:), and (-:xD:)^n = n!L(n,0,:Dx:). M has the coefficients of [D/(1-D)]x^n. (End)
From Tom Copeland, Nov 18 2015: (Start)
Coefficients of the row polynomials of the e.g.f. Sum_{n>=0} P_n(b1,b2,..,bn;t) x^n/n! = e^(P.(..;t) x) = e^(xt) / (1-b.x) = (1 + b1 x + b2 x^2 + b3 x^3 + ...) e^(xt) = 1 + (b1 + t) x + (2 b2 + 2 b1 t + t^2) x^2/2! + (6 b3 + 6 b2 t + 3 b1 t^2 + t^3) x^3/3! + ... , with lowering operator L = d/dt, i.e., L P_n(..;t) = n * P_(n-1)(..;t), and raising operator R = t + d[log(1 + b1 D + b2 D^2 + ...)]/dD = t - Sum_{n>=1} F(n,b1,..,bn) D^(n-1), i.e., R P_n(..,;t) = P_(n+1)(..;t), where D = d/dt and F(n,b1,..,bn) are the Faber polynomials of A263916.
Also P_n(b1,..,bn;t) = CIP_n(t-F(1,b1),-F(2,b1,b2),..,-F(n,b1,..,bn)), the cycle index polynomials A036039.
(End)
The raising operator R = x + 1/(1-D) = x + 1 + D + D^2 + ... in matrix form acting on an o.g.f. (formal power series) is the transpose of the production matrix M below. The linear term x is the diagonal of ones after transposition. The other transposed diagonals come from D^m x^n = n! / (n-m)! x^(n-m). Then P(n,x) = (1,x,x^2,..) M^n (1,0,0,..)^T is a matrix representation of R P(n-1,x) = P(n,x). - Tom Copeland, Aug 17 2016
The row polynomials have e.g.f. e^(xt)/(1-t) = exp(t*q.(x)), umbrally. With p_n(x) the row polynomials of A132013, q_n(x) = v_n(p.(u.(x))), umbrally, where u_n(x) = (-1)^n v_n(-x) = (-1)^n Lah_n(x), the Lah polynomials with e.g.f. exp[x*t/(t-1)]. This has the matrix form [T] = [q] = [v]*[p]*[u]. Conversely, p_n(x) = u_n (q.(v.(x))). - Tom Copeland, Nov 10 2016
From the Appell sequence formalism, 1/(1-b.D) t^n = P_n(b1,b2,..,bn;t), the generalized row polynomials noted in the Nov 18 2015 formulas, consistent with the 2007 comments. - Tom Copeland, Nov 22 2016
From Peter Bala, Feb 18 2017: (Start)
G.f.: Sum_{n >= 1} (n*x)^(n-1)/(1 + (n - t)*x)^n = 1 + (1 + t)*x + (2 + 2*t + t^2)*x^2 + ....
n-th row polynomial R(n,t) = Sum_{k = 0..n} (-1)^(n-k)*binomial(n,k)*(x + k)^k*(x + k - t)^(n-k) = Sum_{k = 0..n} (-1)^(n-k)*binomial(n,k)*(x + k)^(n-k)*(x + k + t)^k, for arbitrary x. The particular case of the latter sum when x = 0 and t = 1 is identity 10.35 in Gould, Vol.4. (End)
Rodrigues-type formula for the row polynomials: R(n, x) = -exp(x)*Int(exp(-x)* x^n, x), for n >= 0. Recurrence: R(n, x) = x^n + n*R(n-1, x), for n >= 1, and R(0, x) = 1. d/dx(R(n, x)) = R(n, x) - x^n, for n >= 0 (compare with the formula from Peter Bala, Aug 28 2013). - Wolfdieter Lang, Dec 23 2019
T(n, k) = Sum_{i=0..n-k} A048994(n-k, i) * n^i for 0 <= k <= n. - Werner Schulte, Jul 26 2022

Extensions

Edited by Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 07 2009
New description from Dennis P. Walsh, Jan 24 2011

A132159 Lower triangular matrix T(n,j) for double application of an iterated mixed order Laguerre transform inverse to A132014. Coefficients of Laguerre polynomials (-1)^n * n! * L(n,-2-n,x).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 1, 6, 4, 1, 24, 18, 6, 1, 120, 96, 36, 8, 1, 720, 600, 240, 60, 10, 1, 5040, 4320, 1800, 480, 90, 12, 1, 40320, 35280, 15120, 4200, 840, 126, 14, 1, 362880, 322560, 141120, 40320, 8400, 1344, 168, 16, 1, 3628800, 3265920, 1451520, 423360, 90720, 15120
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Tom Copeland, Nov 01 2007

Keywords

Comments

The matrix operation b = T*a can be characterized several ways in terms of the coefficients a(n) and b(n), their o.g.f.'s A(x) and B(x), or their e.g.f.'s EA(x) and EB(x).
1) b(n) = n! Lag[n,(.)!*Lag[.,a1(.),-1],0], umbrally,
where a1(n) = n! Lag[n,(.)!*Lag[.,a(.),-1],0]
2) b(n) = (-1)^n * n! * Lag(n,a(.),-2-n)
3) b(n) = Sum_{j=0..n} (-1)^j * binomial(n,j) * binomial(-2,j) * j! * a(n-j)
4) b(n) = Sum_{j=0..n} binomial(n,j) * (j+1)! * a(n-j)
5) B(x) = (1-xDx))^(-2) A(x), formally
6) B(x) = Sum_{j>=0} (-1)^j * binomial(-2,j) * (xDx)^j A(x)
= Sum_{j>=0} (j+1) * (xDx)^j A(x)
7) B(x) = Sum_{j>=0} (j+1) * x^j * D^j * x^j A(x)
8) B(x) = Sum_{j>=0} (j+1)! * x^j * Lag(j,-:xD:,0) A(x)
9) EB(x) = Sum_{j>=0} x^j * Lag[j,(.)! * Lag[.,a1(.),-1],0]
10) EB(x) = Sum_{j>=0} Lag[j,a1(.),-1] * (-x)^j / (1-x)^(j+1)
11) EB(x) = Sum_{j>=0} x^n * Sum_{j=0..n} (j+1)!/j! * a(n-j) / (n-j)!
12) EB(x) = Sum_{j>=0} (-x)^j * Lag[j,a(.),-2-j]
13) EB(x) = exp(a(.)*x) / (1-x)^2 = (1-x)^(-2) * EA(x)
14) T = A094587^2 = A132013^(-2) = A132014^(-1)
where Lag(n,x,m) are the Laguerre polynomials of order m, D the derivative w.r.t. x and (:xD:)^j = x^j * D^j. Truncating the D operator series at the j = n term gives an o.g.f. for b(0) through b(n).
c = (1!,2!,3!,4!,...) is the sequence associated to T under the list partition transform and associated operations described in A133314. Thus T(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*c(n-k) . c are also the coefficients in formulas 4 and 8.
The reciprocal sequence to c is d = (1,-2,2,0,0,0,...), so the inverse of T is TI(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*d(n-k) = A132014. (A121757 is the reverse of T.)
These formulas are easily generalized for m applications of the basic operator n! Lag[n,(.)!*Lag[.,a(.),-1],0] by replacing 2 by m in formulas 2, 3, 5, 6, 12, 13 and 14, or (j+1)! by (m-1+j)!/(m-1)! in 4, 8 and 11. For further discussion of repeated applications of T, see A132014.
The row sums of T = [formula 4 with a(n) all 1] = [binomial transform of c] = [coefficients of B(x) with A(x) = 1/(1-x)] = A001339. Therefore the e.g.f. of A001339 = [formula 13 with a(n) all 1] = exp(x)*(1-x)^(-2) = exp(x)*exp[c(.)*x)] = exp[(1+c(.))*x].
Note the reciprocal is 1/{exp[(1+c(.))*x]} = exp(-x)*(1-x)^2 = e.g.f. of signed A002061 with leading 1 removed], which makes A001339 and the signed, shifted A002061 reciprocal arrays under the list partition transform of A133314.
The e.g.f. for the row polynomials (see A132382) implies they form an Appell sequence (see Wikipedia). - Tom Copeland, Dec 03 2013
As noted in item 12 above and reiterated in the Bala formula below, the e.g.f. is e^(x*t)/(1-x)^2, and the Poisson-Charlier polynomials P_n(t,y) have the e.g.f. (1+x)^y e^(-xt) (Feinsilver, p. 5), so the row polynomials R_n(t) of this entry are (-1)^n P_n(t,-2). The associated Appell sequence IR_n(t) that is the umbral compositional inverse of this entry's polynomials has the e.g.f. (1-x)^2 e^(xt), i.e., the e.g.f. of A132014 (noted above), and, therefore, the row polynomials (-1)^n PC(t,2). As umbral compositional inverses, R_n(IR.(t)) = t^n = IR_n(R.(t)), where, by definition, P.(t)^n = P_n(t), is the umbral evaluation. - Tom Copeland, Jan 15 2016
T(n,k) is the number of ways to place (n-k) rooks in a 2 x (n-1) Ferrers board (or diagram) under the Goldman-Haglund i-row creation rook mode for i=2. Triangular recurrence relation is given by T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + (n+1-k)*T(n-1,k). - Ken Joffaniel M. Gonzales, Jan 21 2016

Examples

			First few rows of the triangle are
    1;
    2,  1;
    6,  4,  1;
   24, 18,  6, 1;
  120, 96, 36, 8, 1;
		

Crossrefs

Columns: A000142 (k=0), A001563 (k=1), A001286 (k=2), A005990 (k=3), A061206 (k=4), A062199 (k=5), A062148 (k=6).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a132159 n k = a132159_tabl !! n !! k
    a132159_row n = a132159_tabl !! n
    a132159_tabl = map reverse a121757_tabl
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 06 2014
    
  • Magma
    /* As triangle */ [[Binomial(n,k)*Factorial(n-k+1): k in [0..n]]: n in [0.. 15]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Feb 10 2016
    
  • Maple
    T := proc(n,k) return binomial(n,k)*factorial(n-k+1): end: seq(seq(T(n,k),k=0..n),n=0..10); # Nathaniel Johnston, Sep 28 2011
  • Mathematica
    nn=10;f[list_]:=Select[list,#>0&];Map[f,Range[0,nn]!CoefficientList[Series[Exp[y x]/(1-x)^2,{x,0,nn}],{x,y}]]//Grid  (* Geoffrey Critzer, Feb 15 2013 *)
  • Sage
    flatten([[binomial(n,k)*factorial(n-k+1) for k in (0..n)] for n in (0..15)]) # G. C. Greubel, May 19 2021

Formula

T(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*c(n-k).
From Peter Bala, Jul 10 2008: (Start)
T(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*(n-k+1)!.
T(n,k) = (n-k+1)*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k-1).
E.g.f.: exp(x*y)/(1-y)^2 = 1 + (2+x)*y + (6+4*x+x^2)*y^2/2! + ... .
This array is the particular case P(2,1) of the generalized Pascal triangle P(a,b), a lower unit triangular matrix, shown below:
n\k|0....................1...............2.........3.....4
----------------------------------------------------------
0..|1.....................................................
1..|a....................1................................
2..|a(a+b)...............2a..............1................
3..|a(a+b)(a+2b).........3a(a+b).........3a........1......
4..|a(a+b)(a+2b)(a+3b)...4a(a+b)(a+2b)...6a(a+b)...4a....1
...
See A094587 for some general properties of these arrays.
Other cases recorded in the database include: P(1,0) = Pascal's triangle A007318, P(1,1) = A094587, P(2,0) = A038207, P(3,0) = A027465, P(1,3) = A136215 and P(2,3) = A136216. (End)
Let f(x) = (1/x^2)*exp(-x). The n-th row polynomial is R(n,x) = (-x)^n/f(x)*(d/dx)^n(f(x)), and satisfies the recurrence equation R(n+1,x) = (x+n+2)*R(n,x)-x*R'(n,x). Cf. A094587. - Peter Bala, Oct 28 2011
Exponential Riordan array [1/(1 - y)^2, y]. The row polynomials R(n,x) thus form a Sheffer sequence of polynomials with associated delta operator equal to d/dx. Thus d/dx(R(n,x)) = n*R(n-1,x). The Sheffer identity is R(n,x + y) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k)*y^(n-k)*R(k,x). Define a polynomial sequence P(n,x) of binomial type by setting P(n,x) = Product_{k = 0..n-1} (2*x + k) with the convention that P(0,x) = 1. Then the present triangle is the triangle of connection constants when expressing the basis polynomials P(n,x + 1) in terms of the basis P(n,x). For example, row 3 is (24, 18, 6, 1) so P(3,x + 1) = (2*x + 2)*(2*x + 3)*(2*x + 4) = 24 + 18*(2*x) + 6*(2*x)*(2*x + 1) + (2*x)*(2*x + 1)*(2*x + 2). Matrix square of triangle A094587. - Peter Bala, Aug 29 2013
From Tom Copeland, Apr 21 2014: (Start)
T = (I-A132440)^(-2) = {2*I - exp[(A238385-I)]}^(-2) = unsigned exp[2*(I-A238385)] = exp[A005649(.)*(A238385-I)], umbrally, where I = identity matrix.
The e.g.f. is exp(x*y)*(1-y)^(-2), so the row polynomials form an Appell sequence with lowering operator D=d/dx and raising operator x+2/(1-D).
With L(n,m,x) = Laguerre polynomials of order m, the row polynomials are (-1)^n * n! * L(n,-2-n,x) = (-1)^n*(-2!/(-2-n)!)*K(-n,-2-n+1,x) where K is Kummer's confluent hypergeometric function (as a limit of n+s as s tends to zero).
Operationally, (-1)^n*n!*L(n,-2-n,-:xD:) = (-1)^n*x^(n+2)*:Dx:^n*x^(-2-n) = (-1)^n*x^2*:xD:^n*x^(-2) = (-1)^n*n!*binomial(xD-2,n) = (-1)^n*n!*binomial(-2,n)*K(-n,-2-n+1,-:xD:) where :AB:^n = A^n*B^n for any two operators. Cf. A235706.
The generalized Pascal triangle Bala mentions is a special case of the fundamental generalized factorial matrices in A133314. (End)
From Peter Bala, Jul 26 2021: (Start)
O.g.f: 1/y * Sum_{k >= 0} k!*( y/(1 - x*y) )^k = 1 + (2 + x)*y + (6 + 4*x + x^2)*y^2 + ....
First-order recurrence for the row polynomials: (n - x)*R(n,x) = n*(n - x + 1)*R(n-1,x) - x^(n+1) with R(0,x) = 1.
R(n,x) = (x + n + 1)*R(n-1,x) - (n - 1)*x*R(n-2,x) with R(0,x) = 1 and R(1,x) = 2 + x.
R(n,x) = A087981 (x = -2), A000255 (x = -1), A000142 (x = 0), A001339 (x = 1), A081923 (x = 2) and A081924 (x = 3). (End)

Extensions

Formula 3) in comments corrected by Tom Copeland, Apr 20 2014
Title modified by Tom Copeland, Apr 23 2014

A136216 Triangle T, read by rows, where T(n,k) = A008544(n-k)*C(n,k) where A008544 equals the triple factorials in column 0.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 1, 10, 4, 1, 80, 30, 6, 1, 880, 320, 60, 8, 1, 12320, 4400, 800, 100, 10, 1, 209440, 73920, 13200, 1600, 150, 12, 1, 4188800, 1466080, 258720, 30800, 2800, 210, 14, 1, 96342400, 33510400, 5864320, 689920, 61600, 4480, 280, 16, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Paul D. Hanna, Feb 07 2008

Keywords

Comments

This array is the particular case P(2,3) of the generalized Pascal triangle P(a,b), a lower unit triangular matrix, shown in the comments to A094587. - Peter Bala, Jul 10 2008
The row polynomials form an Appell sequence. - Tom Copeland, Dec 03 2013

Examples

			Triangle begins:
1;
2, 1;
10, 4, 1;
80, 30, 6, 1;
880, 320, 60, 8, 1;
12320, 4400, 800, 100, 10, 1;
209440, 73920, 13200, 1600, 150, 12, 1;
4188800, 1466080, 258720, 30800, 2800, 210, 14, 1; ...
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A136215 (square-root), A112333, A008544, A136212, A136213.
Cf. A094587.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    (* The function RiordanArray is defined in A256893. *)
    RiordanArray[1/(1 - 3 #)^(2/3)&, #&, 9, True] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Jul 19 2019 *)
  • PARI
    {T(n,k) = binomial(n,k)*if(n-k==0,1, prod(j=0,n-k-1,3*j+2))}
    for(n=0,10,for(k=0,n,print1(T(n,k),", "));print(""))

Formula

Column k of T = column 0 of V^(k+1) for k>=0 where V = A112333.
Equals the matrix square of triangle A136215.
T(n,k) = (3*n-3*k-1)*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k-1). - Peter Bala, Jul 10 2008
Using the formalism of A132382 modified for the triple rather than the double factorial (replace 2 by 3 in basic formulas), the e.g.f. for the row polynomials is exp(x*t)*(1-3x)^(-2/3). - Tom Copeland, Aug 18 2008
From Peter Bala, Aug 28 2013: (Start)
Exponential Riordan array [1/(1 - 3*y)^(2/3), y].
The row polynomials R(n,x) thus form a Sheffer sequence of polynomials with associated delta operator equal to d/dx. Thus d/dx(R(n,x)) = n*R(n-1,x). The Sheffer identity is R(n,x + y) = sum {k = 0..n} binomial(n,k)*y^(n-k)*R(k,x).
Define a polynomial sequence P(n,x) of binomial type by setting P(n,x) = product {k = 0..n-1} (2*x + 3*k) with the convention that P(0,x) = 1. Then this is triangle of connection constants when expressing the basis polynomials P(n,x + 1) in terms of the basis P(n,x). For example, row 3 is (80, 30, 6, 1) so P(3,x + 1) = (2*x + 2)*(2*x + 5)*(2*x + 8) = 80 + 20*(2*x) + 6*(2*x*(2*x + 3)) + (2*x)*(2*x + 3)*(2*x + 6). (End)
Showing 1-3 of 3 results.