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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A356145 Coefficients of the inverse refined Eulerian partition polynomials [E]^{-1}, partitional inverse to A145271. Irregular triangle read by row with lengths A000041.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, -1, 1, 3, -4, 1, -15, 25, -4, -7, 1, 105, -210, 70, 60, -15, -11, 1, -945, 2205, -1120, -630, 70, 350, 126, -15, -26, -16, 1, 10395, -27720, 18900, 7875, -2800, -6930, -1638, 560, 455, 784, 238, -56, -42, -22, 1, -135135, 405405, -346500, -114345, 84700
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Tom Copeland, Jul 27 2022

Keywords

Comments

These are the coefficients of the inverse refined Eulerian partitions polynomials, the substitutional inverse to the refined Eulerian partition polynomials [E] of A145271. [E] and [E]^{-1} are a conjugate dual with respect to the permutahedra polynomials [P] of A133314 (see formula section).

Examples

			The first few rows of coefficients with monomials in reverse order to the partitions of Abramowitz and Stegun (link in A000041, pp. 831-2) are
0)       1;
1)       1;
2)      -1,      1;
3)       3,     -4,       1;
4)     -15,     25,      -4,      -7,     1;
5)     105,   -210,      70,      60,   -15,    -11,     1;
6)    -945,   2205,   -1120,    -630,    70,    350,   126,   -15,    -26,    -16,      1;
7)   10395, -27720,   18900,    7875, -2800,  -6930, -1638,   560,    455,    784,    238,   -56,  -42,  -22,    1;
8) -135135, 405405, -346500, -114345, 84700, 138600, 24255, -2800, -27300, -11025, -18900, -3780, 1575, 1344, 2142, 1596, 414, -56, -98, -64, -29, 1;
    ...
The first few partition polynomials are
E_0^{(-1)} = 1,
E_1^{(-1)} = a1,
E_2^{(-1)} = -a1^2 + a2,
E_3^{(-1)} = 3 a1^3 - 4 a1 a2 + a3,
E_4^{(-1)} = -15 a1^4 + 25 a1^2 a2 - 4 a2^2 - 7 a1 a3 + a4,
E_5^{(-1)} = 105 a1^5 - 210 a1^3 a2 + 70 a1 a2^2 + 60 a1^2 a3 - 15 a2 a3 - 11 a1 a4 + a5,
E_6^{(-1)} = -945 a1^6 + 2205 a1^4 a2 - 1120 a1^2 a2^2 - 630 a1^3 a3 + 70 a2^3 + 350 a1 a2 a3 + 126 a1^2 a4 - 15 a3^2 - 26 a2 a4 - 16 a1 a5 + a6,
E_7^{(-1)} = 10395 a1^7 - 27720 a1^5 a2 + 18900 a1^3 a2^2 + 7875 a1^4 a3 - 2800 a1 a2^3 - 6930 a1^2 a2 a3 - 1638 a1^3 a4 + 560 a2^2 a3 + 455 a1 a3^2 + 784 a1 a2 a4 + 238 a1^2 a5 - 56 a3 a4 - 42 a2 a5 - 22 a1 a6 + a7,
E_8^{(-1)} = -135135 a1^8 + 405405 a1^6 a2 - 346500 a1^4 a2^2 - 114345 a1^5 a3 + 84700 a1^2 a2^3 + 138600 a1^3 a2 a3 + 24255 a1^4 a4 - 2800 a2^4 - 27300 a1 a2^2 a3 - 11025 a1^2 a3^2 - 18900 a1^2 a2 a4 - 3780 a1^3 a5 + 1575 a2 a3^2 + 1344 a2^2 a4 + 2142 a1 a3 a4 + 1596 a1 a2 a5 + 414 a1^2 a6 - 56 a4^2 - 98 a3 a5 - 64 a2 a6 - 29 a1ma7 + a8,
... .
Example substitution identities:
With the permutahedra polynomials
P_1 = -a_1,
P_2 = 2*a_1^2 - a_2,
P_3 = -6*a_1^3 + 6*a_2*a_1 - a_3,
the refined Eulerian polynomials
E_1 = a_1,
E_2 = a_1^2 + a_2,
E_3 = a_1^3 + 4*a_1*a_2 + a_3,
the reciprocal tangent polynomials
RT_1 = -a_1,
RT_2 = -a_2 + a_1^2,
RT_3 = -a_3 + 2*a_1*a_2 - a_1^3,
the Lagrange inversion polynomials
L_1 = -a_1,
L_2 = 3*a_1^2 - a_2,
L_3 = -15*a_1^3 + 10*a_1a_2 - a_3,
then
E^{-1}_3 = P_3(L_1,L_2,L_3) = -6*(-a_1)^3 + 6*(3*a_1^2 - a_2)*(-a_1) - (-15*a_1^3 + 10*a_1*a_2 - a_3) = 3*a_1^3 - 4*a_2*a_1 + a_3,
E^{-1}_3 = RT_3(P_1,P_2,P_3) = -(-6*a_1^3 + 6*a_2*a_1 - a_3) + 2*(-a_1)*(2*a_1^2 - a_2) - (-a_1)^3 = 3*a_1^3 - 4*a_2*a_1 + a_3,
E{-1}_3(E_1,E_2,E_3) = 3*a_1^3 - 4*a_1*(a_1^2 + a_2) + (a_1^3 + 4*a_1*a_2 + a_3) = a_3.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    rows[nn_] := {{1}}~Join~With[{s = 1/D[InverseSeries[x + Sum[c[k - 1] x^k/k!, {k, 2, nn}] + O[x]^(nn + 1)], x]}, Table[Coefficient[n! s, x^n Product[c[t], {t, p}]], {n, nn-1}, {p, Reverse[Sort[Sort /@ IntegerPartitions[n]]]}]];
    rows[8] // Flatten (* Andrey Zabolotskiy, Feb 17 2024 *)
  • SageMath
    B. = PolynomialRing(ZZ)
    A. = PowerSeriesRing(B)
    f =  x + a1*x^2/factorial(2) + a2*x^3/factorial(3) + a3*x^4/factorial(4) + a4*x^5/factorial(5) + a5*x^6/factorial(6) + a6*x^7/factorial(7) + a7*x^8/factorial(8) + a8*x^9/factorial(9) + a9*x^10/factorial(10)
    g = f.reverse()
    w = derivative(g,x)
    I = 1 / w
    # Added by Peter Luschny, Feb 17 2024:
    for n, c in enumerate(I.list()[:9]):
        print(f"E[{n}]", (factorial(n)*c).coefficients())

Formula

Given the formal Taylor series or e.g.f. f(x) = x + a_1 x^2/2! + a_2 x^3/3! + ...,
E_n^{-1}(a_1,a_2,...,a_n) = D_{x=0}^n 1 / (D_x f^{(-1)}(x)), where D_x is the derivative w.r.t. x and f^{(-1)}(x) is the (possibly formal) compositional inverse of f(x) about the origin.
E_n^{-1}(a_1,a_2,...,a_n) = D_{x=0}^n 1 f'(f^{(-1)}(x)) by the inverse function theorem, where the prime indicates differentiation w.r.t. the argument of the function f. Note the correspondence to the analytic definitions of the reciprocal tangents [RT] of A356144, consistent with the following algebraic identities.
[E]^{-1} = [P][L] = [P][E][P] = [RT][P], representing, e.g., the substitution of the permutahedra polynomials [P] of A133314 for the indeterminates of the reciprocal tangent polynomials [RT] of A356144. [E] are the refined Eulerian polynomials of A145271, and [L], the classic Lagrange inversion polynomials of A134685.
Since [P]^2 = [L]^2 = [RT]^2 = [I], the substitutional identity, i.e., [P], [L], and [RT] are involutive transformations, many identities follow from the basic ones above, e.g., [L] = [P][E]^{-1} gives an inversion formula for a formal e.g.f. f(x) = x + a_1 x^2/2! + a_2 x^3/3! + ..., and we can identify [E] and [E]^{-1} as a conjugate dual.
With a_n = -x, [E]^{-1} reduces to a signed version of A112493 with an additional initial row, with the row sums of the unsigned coefficients being (1, A006351). A112493 is also given by the diagonals of A124324. See my link above on the reduced polynomials and associated arrays for more detail.
The sequence of row sums of the signed coefficients, i.e., E^{-1}(1,1,...,1), is the sequence (1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...).
Conjecture: row polynomials are R(n,1) for n > 0 where R(n,k) = R(n-1,k+1) - Sum_{j=1..n-1} binomial(n-1,j-1)*R(j,k)*R(n-j,1) for n > 1, k > 0 with R(1,k) = a_k for k > 0. - Mikhail Kurkov, Mar 22 2025

A356144 Coefficients of the set of partition polynomials [RT] = [P][E]; i.e., coefficients of polynomials resulting from using the set of refined Eulerian polynomials, [E], of A145271 as the indeterminates of the set of permutahedra polynomials, [P], of A133314. Irregular triangle read by rows with lengths given by A000041.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, -1, 1, -1, -1, 2, -1, 1, -3, 2, 1, -1, -1, 4, -4, -2, 5, -1, -1, 1, -5, 8, 2, -4, -2, -4, 5, 4, -4, -1, -1, 6, -12, -3, 8, 18, -6, -14, 13, 2, -16, 14, 0, -8, -1, 1, -7, 18, 3, -20, 0, -15, 8, 18, 57, 6, -54, -15, -12, 84, -30, -48, 14, 14, -8, -13, -1, -1, 8, -24, -4, 32, 51, -27, -16, -6, 171, -42, -177, 50, 90, -18, 456, -276, -246, -15, 30, 154, -42, 124, -166, -113, 42, 6, -21, -19, -1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Tom Copeland, Jul 27 2022

Keywords

Comments

I stipulate that the row lengths are A000041, but this imposes the insertion of a zero as a coefficient of a monomial for the polynomial RT_7 and for RT_8. The number of nonzero coefficients in each higher order polynomial remains to be determined. The monomials of the partition polynomials are arranged in the order (bottom to top) in Abramowitz and Stegun (starting on p. 831, link in A000041).
The analytic interpretation of these coefficients is related to the e.g.f.s of reciprocals of the derivatives (slopes of tangents) of a pair of compositionally inverse e.g.f.s as explicitly shown in the formulas.
With the notation introduced in the formula section, this set of partition polynomials, [RT], is the e.g.f. counterpart to the special Schur expansion coefficients [b], or [K], of A355201 for o.g.f.s. and is conjugate dual to the Lagrange inversion polynomials [L] of A134685.
For example, as shown in the formulas, [RT] = [P][E] = [P][L][P] where [P] is the set of polynomials of A133314, the refined Euler characteristic polynomials of the permutahedra; [E], the set A145271, the refined Eulerian polynomials; and [L], the set A134685, the classic Lagrange inversion polynomials--all related to transformations of e.g.f.s, or Taylor series, for which [RT], [L], and [E] can each be used to give the compositional inverse and [P], the multiplicative inverse, or reciprocal.
On the other hand, as shown in formulas for A355201, [K] = [R][N] = [R][A][R] where [R] is the set A263633 (mod signs), refined Pascal polynomials; [N], the set A134264, the refined Narayana, or noncrossing partition, polynomials; and [A], the set A133437, the refined Euler characteristic polynomials of the associahedra--all related to transformations of o.g.f.s, or power series, for which [K], [A], and [N] can each be used to give the compositional inverse and [R], the multiplicative inverse, or reciprocal. This is related to three pairs of compositionally inverse series--two pairs of Laurent series and one pair of power series.

Examples

			Arranged by rows, the coefficients are
0)  1;
1) -1;
2)  1, -1;
3) -1, 2, -1;
4)  1, -3, 2, 1, -1;
5) -1, 4, -4, -2, 5, -1, -1;
6)  1, -5, 8, 2, -4, -2, -4, 5, 4, -4, -1;
7) -1, 6, -12, -3, 8, 18, -6, -14, 13, 2, -16, 14, 0, -8, -1;
8)  1, -7, 18, 3, -20, 0, -15, 8, 18, 57, 6, -54, -15, -12, 84, -30, -48, 14, 14, -8, -13, -1;
. . .
The first few partition polynomials are
RT_0 =  1,
RT_1 = -a1,
RT_2 = a1^2  - a2,
RT_3 = -a1^3 + 2 a1 a2 - a3,
Rt_4 = a1^4 - 3 a1^2 a2 + 2 a2^2 + a1 a3 - a4,
RT_5 = -a1^5 + 4 a1^3 a2 - 4 a1 a2^2 - 2 a1^2 a3 + 5 a2 a3 - a1 a4 - a5,
RT_6 = a1^6 - 5 a1^4 a2 + 8 a1^2 a2^2 + 2 a1^3 a3 - 4 a2^3 - 2 a1 a2 a3 - 4 a1^2 a4 + 5 a3^2 + 4 a2 a4 - 4 a1 a5 - a6,
RT_7 = -a1^7 + 6 a1^5 a2 - 12*a1^3 a2^2 - 3 a1^4 a3 + 8 a1 a2^3 + 18 a1^2 a2 a3 - 6 a1^3 a4 - 14 a2^2 a3 + 13 a1 a3^2 + 2 a1 a2 a4 - 16 a1^2 a5 + 14 a3 a4 + 0 a2 a5 - 8 a1 a6 - a7,
RT_8 =  a1^8 - 7 a1^6 a2 + 18 a1^4 a2^2 + 3 a1^5 a3 - 20 a1^2 a2^3 + 0 a1^3 a2 a3 - 15 a1^4 a4 + 8 a2^4 + 18 a1 a2^2 a3 + 57 a1^2 a3^2 + 6 a1^2 a2 a4 - 54 a1^3 a5 - 15 a2 a3^2 - 12 a2^2 a4 + 84 a1 a3 a4 - 30 a1 a2 a5 - 48 a1^2 a6 + 14 a4^2 + 14 a3 a5 - 8 a2 a6 - 13 a1 a7 - a8.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    rows[nn_] := {{1}}~Join~With[{s = 1 / D[InverseSeries[Integrate[1/(1 + Sum[c[k] x^k/k!, {k, nn}] + O[x]^(nn+1)), x]], x]}, Table[Coefficient[n! s, x^n Product[c[t], {t, p}]], {n, nn}, {p, Reverse[Sort[Sort /@ IntegerPartitions[n]]]}]];
    rows[7] // Flatten (* Andrey Zabolotskiy, Feb 17 2024 *)
  • SageMath
    B. = PolynomialRing(ZZ)
    A. = PowerSeriesRing(B)
    f = 1/(1 + a1*x + a2*x^2/factorial(2) + a3*x^3/factorial(3) + a4*x^4/factorial(4) + a5*x^5/factorial(5) + a6*x^6/factorial(6) + a7*x^7/factorial(7) + a8*x^8/factorial(8) + a9*x^9/factorial(9) + a10*x^10/factorial(10) )
    g = integrate(f)
    h = g.reverse()
    w = derivative(h,x)
    I = 1 / w
    # Added by # Peter Luschny, Feb 17 2024:
    # The list of coefficients in sparse format (i.e. without the zeros):
    for n, c in enumerate(I.list()[:10]):
        print(f"RT[{n}]", (factorial(n)*c).coefficients())

Formula

Denote this set of partition polynomials by [RT], the permutahedra polynomials of A133314 by [P], the refined Eulerian polynomials of A145271 by [E], and the Lagrange inversion polynomials of A134685 for e.g.f.s by [L]. Let the typically noncommutative product of two sets, e.g., [P][E], represent the substitution of the polynomials of [E] for the indeterminates of [P], i.e., a composition at the level of the indeterminates (see A356145 for examples). Let [I] be the substitutional identity transformation, and mark the substitutional inverse with the superscript -1. Then the following relations hold.
[RT] = [P][E] = [P][L][P] = [P]^{-1}[L][P] = [P][L][P]^{-1} since [P] is an involution, i.e., [P]^2 = [I], or [P] = [P]^{-1}, so [RT] and [L] are conjugate duals.
[RT]^{-1} = ([P][E])^{-1} = [E]^{-1}[P] = ([P][L][P])^{-1} = [P][L][P] = [RT], with [E]^{-1} = A356145, since [L] and [P] are involutions, so is [RT], i.e., [RT]^2 = [I].
RT_n(a_1,a_2,...,a_n) = D_{x=0}^n 1 / [ D_x f^{(-1)}(x)] for which D_x is the derivative w.r.t. x and the indeterminates are defined by 1 / [D_x f(x)] = 1 + a_1 x + a_2 x^2/2! + a_3 x^3/3! + ... with f(x) and f^{(-1)}(x) a compositional inverse pair of formal Taylor series, or e.g.f.s. This is the analytic equivalent of the algebraic relation [RT] = [P][E]. In words, the partition polynomials of row n (initial row is 0) is the n-th coefficient of the formal Taylor series of the reciprocal of the derivative of the compositional inverse of a function in terms of the Taylor series coefficients of the reciprocal of the derivative of that function. Note the correspondence with the analytic interpretation of [E]^{-1} of A356145, consistent with the algebraic identities above.
RT_n(a_1,a_2,...,a_n) = D_{x=0}^n f'(f^{(-1)}(x)) also, by the inverse function theorem, where the prime denotes differentiation with respect to the argument of the function.
With all a_k = (-1)^k, RT_0 = RT_1 = 1, otherwise RT_n = 0. This is determined with f(x) = e^{x}-1 and f^{(-1)}(x) = log(1+x).
With all a_k = 1, RT_0 = 1, RT_1 = -1, otherwise RT_n=0. This is determined with f(x) =1-e^{-x} and f^{(-1)}(x) = -log(1-x).
With all a_k = -1, RT_0 = 1 and RT_n = 2^(n-1) otherwise. This is determined with f(x) = (x - log(2-e^x))/2 and f^{(-1)}(x) = x - log(cosh(x)). (Careful, these are not the row sums of the absolute values of the numerical coefficients, which for the first ten polynomials are 1, 1, 2, 4, 8, 18, 40, 122, 446, and 2428.)
With a_k = k! 2^k, RT_0 = 1 and RT_n = -2*(2(n-1))! / (n-1)! = -2*n!*A000108(n-1) otherwise. This is determined with f(x) = x - x^2 and f^{(-1)}(x) = (1 - sqrt(1-4x))/2. Similar relations hold for the Fuss-Catalan sequences with f(x) = x - x^{m+1} for m > 1.

Extensions

Order of terms in rows 4-6 corrected by Andrey Zabolotskiy, Feb 17 2024

A008292 Triangle of Eulerian numbers T(n,k) (n >= 1, 1 <= k <= n) read by rows.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 4, 1, 1, 11, 11, 1, 1, 26, 66, 26, 1, 1, 57, 302, 302, 57, 1, 1, 120, 1191, 2416, 1191, 120, 1, 1, 247, 4293, 15619, 15619, 4293, 247, 1, 1, 502, 14608, 88234, 156190, 88234, 14608, 502, 1, 1, 1013, 47840, 455192, 1310354, 1310354, 455192, 47840, 1013, 1
Offset: 1

Views

Author

N. J. A. Sloane, Mar 15 1996

Keywords

Comments

The indexing used here follows that given in the classic books by Riordan and Comtet. For two other versions see A173018 and A123125. - N. J. A. Sloane, Nov 21 2010
Coefficients of Eulerian polynomials. Number of permutations of n objects with k-1 rises. Number of increasing rooted trees with n+1 nodes and k leaves.
T(n,k) = number of permutations of [n] with k runs. T(n,k) = number of permutations of [n] requiring k readings (see the Knuth reference). T(n,k) = number of permutations of [n] having k distinct entries in its inversion table. - Emeric Deutsch, Jun 09 2004
T(n,k) = number of ways to write the Coxeter element s_{e1}s_{e1-e2}s_{e2-e3}s_{e3-e4}...s_{e_{n-1}-e_n} of the reflection group of type B_n, using s_{e_k} and as few reflections of the form s_{e_i+e_j}, where i = 1, 2, ..., n and j is not equal to i, as possible. - Pramook Khungurn (pramook(AT)mit.edu), Jul 07 2004
Subtriangle for k>=1 and n>=1 of triangle A123125. - Philippe Deléham, Oct 22 2006
T(n,k)/n! also represents the n-dimensional volume of the portion of the n-dimensional hypercube cut by the (n-1)-dimensional hyperplanes x_1 + x_2 + ... x_n = k, x_1 + x_2 + ... x_n = k-1; or, equivalently, it represents the probability that the sum of n independent random variables with uniform distribution between 0 and 1 is between k-1 and k. - Stefano Zunino, Oct 25 2006
[E(.,t)/(1-t)]^n = n!*Lag[n,-P(.,t)/(1-t)] and [-P(.,t)/(1-t)]^n = n!*Lag[n, E(.,t)/(1-t)] umbrally comprise a combinatorial Laguerre transform pair, where E(n,t) are the Eulerian polynomials and P(n,t) are the polynomials in A131758. - Tom Copeland, Sep 30 2007
From Tom Copeland, Oct 07 2008: (Start)
G(x,t) = 1/(1 + (1-exp(x*t))/t) = 1 + 1*x + (2+t)*x^2/2! + (6+6*t+t^2)*x^3/3! + ... gives row polynomials for A090582, the reverse f-polynomials for the permutohedra (see A019538).
G(x,t-1) = 1 + 1*x + (1+t)*x^2/2! + (1+4*t+t^2)*x^3/3! + ... gives row polynomials for A008292, the h-polynomials for permutohedra (Postnikov et al.).
G((t+1)*x, -1/(t+1)) = 1 + (1+t)*x + (1+3*t+2*t^2)*x^2/2! + ... gives row polynomials for A028246.
(End)
A subexceedant function f on [n] is a map f:[n] -> [n] such that 1 <= f(i) <= i for all i, 1 <= i <= n. T(n,k) equals the number of subexceedant functions f of [n] such that the image of f has cardinality k [Mantaci & Rakotondrajao]. Example T(3,2) = 4: if we identify a subexceedant function f with the word f(1)f(2)...f(n) then the subexceedant functions on [3] are 111, 112, 113, 121, 122 and 123 and four of these functions have an image set of cardinality 2. - Peter Bala, Oct 21 2008
Further to the comments of Tom Copeland above, the n-th row of this triangle is the h-vector of the simplicial complex dual to a permutohedron of type A_(n-1). The corresponding f-vectors are the rows of A019538. For example, 1 + 4*x + x^2 = y^2 + 6*y + 6 and 1 + 11*x + 11*x^2 + x^3 = y^3 + 14*y^2 + 36*y + 24, where x = y + 1, give [1,6,6] and [1,14,36,24] as the third and fourth rows of A019538. The Hilbert transform of this triangle (see A145905 for the definition) is A047969. See A060187 for the triangle of Eulerian numbers of type B (the h-vectors of the simplicial complexes dual to permutohedra of type B). See A066094 for the array of h-vectors of type D. For tables of restricted Eulerian numbers see A144696 - A144699. - Peter Bala, Oct 26 2008
For a natural refinement of A008292 with connections to compositional inversion and iterated derivatives, see A145271. - Tom Copeland, Nov 06 2008
The polynomials E(z,n) = numerator(Sum_{k>=1} (-1)^(n+1)*k^n*z^(k-1)) for n >=1 lead directly to the triangle of Eulerian numbers. - Johannes W. Meijer, May 24 2009
From Walther Janous (walther.janous(AT)tirol.com), Nov 01 2009: (Start)
The (Eulerian) polynomials e(n,x) = Sum_{k=0..n-1} T(n,k+1)*x^k turn out to be also the numerators of the closed-form expressions of the infinite sums:
S(p,x) = Sum_{j>=0} (j+1)^p*x^j, that is
S(p,x) = e(p,x)/(1-x)^(p+1), whenever |x| < 1 and p is a positive integer.
(Note the inconsistent use of T(n,k) in the section listing the formula section. I adhere tacitly to the first one.) (End)
If n is an odd prime, then all numbers of the (n-2)-th and (n-1)-th rows are in the progression k*n+1. - Vladimir Shevelev, Jul 01 2011
The Eulerian triangle is an element of the formula for the r-th successive summation of Sum_{k=1..n} k^j which appears to be Sum_{k=1..n} T(j,k-1) * binomial(j-k+n+r, j+r). - Gary Detlefs, Nov 11 2011
Li and Wong show that T(n,k) counts the combinatorially inequivalent star polygons with n+1 vertices and sum of angles (2*k-n-1)*Pi. An equivalent formulation is: define the total sign change S(p) of a permutation p in the symmetric group S_n to be equal to Sum_{i=1..n} sign(p(i)-p(i+1)), where we take p(n+1) = p(1). T(n,k) gives the number of permutations q in S_(n+1) with q(1) = 1 and S(q) = 2*k-n-1. For example, T(3,2) = 4 since in S_4 the permutations (1243), (1324), (1342) and (1423) have total sign change 0. - Peter Bala, Dec 27 2011
Xiong, Hall and Tsao refer to Riordan and mention that a traditional Eulerian number A(n,k) is the number of permutations of (1,2...n) with k weak exceedances. - Susanne Wienand, Aug 25 2014
Connections to algebraic geometry/topology and characteristic classes are discussed in the Buchstaber and Bunkova, the Copeland, the Hirzebruch, the Lenart and Zainoulline, the Losev and Manin, and the Sheppeard links; to the Grassmannian, in the Copeland, the Farber and Postnikov, the Sheppeard, and the Williams links; and to compositional inversion and differential operators, in the Copeland and the Parker links. - Tom Copeland, Oct 20 2015
The bivariate e.g.f. noted in the formulas is related to multiplying edges in certain graphs discussed in the Aluffi-Marcolli link. See p. 42. - Tom Copeland, Dec 18 2016
Distribution of left children in treeshelves is given by a shift of the Eulerian numbers. Treeshelves are ordered binary (0-1-2) increasing trees where every child is connected to its parent by a left or a right link. See A278677, A278678 or A278679 for more definitions and examples. - Sergey Kirgizov, Dec 24 2016
The row polynomial P(n, x) = Sum_{k=1..n} T(n, k)*x^k appears in the numerator of the o.g.f. G(n, x) = Sum_{m>=0} S(n, m)*x^m with S(n, m) = Sum_{j=0..m} j^n for n >= 1 as G(n, x) = Sum_{k=1..n} P(n, x)/(1 - x)^(n+2) for n >= 0 (with 0^0=1). See also triangle A131689 with a Mar 31 2017 comment for a rewritten form. For the e.g.f see A028246 with a Mar 13 2017 comment. - Wolfdieter Lang, Mar 31 2017
For relations to Ehrhart polynomials, volumes of polytopes, polylogarithms, the Todd operator, and other special functions, polynomials, and sequences, see A131758 and the references therein. - Tom Copeland, Jun 20 2017
For relations to values of the Riemann zeta function at integral arguments, see A131758 and the Dupont reference. - Tom Copeland, Mar 19 2018
Normalized volumes of the hypersimplices, attributed to Laplace. (Cf. the De Loera et al. reference, p. 327.) - Tom Copeland, Jun 25 2018

Examples

			The triangle T(n, k) begins:
n\k 1    2     3      4       5       6      7     8    9 10 ...
1:  1
2:  1    1
3:  1    4     1
4:  1   11    11      1
5:  1   26    66     26       1
6:  1   57   302    302      57       1
7:  1  120  1191   2416    1191     120      1
8:  1  247  4293  15619   15619    4293    247     1
9:  1  502 14608  88234  156190   88234  14608   502    1
10: 1 1013 47840 455192 1310354 1310354 455192 47840 1013  1
... Reformatted. - _Wolfdieter Lang_, Feb 14 2015
-----------------------------------------------------------------
E.g.f. = (y) * x^1 / 1! + (y + y^2) * x^2 / 2! + (y + 4*y^2 + y^3) * x^3 / 3! + ... - _Michael Somos_, Mar 17 2011
Let n=7. Then the following 2*7+1=15 consecutive terms are 1(mod 7): a(15+i), i=0..14. - _Vladimir Shevelev_, Jul 01 2011
Row 3: The plane increasing 0-1-2 trees on 3 vertices (with the number of colored vertices shown to the right of a vertex) are
.
.   1o (1+t)         1o t         1o t
.   |                / \          / \
.   |               /   \        /   \
.   2o (1+t)      2o     3o    3o    2o
.   |
.   |
.   3o
.
The total number of trees is (1+t)^2 + t + t = 1 + 4*t + t^2.
		

References

  • Mohammad K. Azarian, Geometric Series, Problem 329, Mathematics and Computer Education, Vol. 30, No. 1, Winter 1996, p. 101. Solution published in Vol. 31, No. 2, Spring 1997, pp. 196-197.
  • Miklos Bona, editor, Handbook of Enumerative Combinatorics, CRC Press, 2015, page 106.
  • L. Comtet, Advanced Combinatorics, Reidel, 1974, p. 243.
  • F. N. David, M. G. Kendall and D. E. Barton, Symmetric Function and Allied Tables, Cambridge, 1966, p. 260.
  • R. L. Graham, D. E. Knuth and O. Patashnik, Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1990, p. 254; 2nd. ed., p. 268.[Worpitzky's identity (6.37)]
  • D. E. Knuth, The Art of Computer Programming. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1998, Vol. 3, p. 47 (exercise 5.1.4 Nr. 20) and p. 605 (solution).
  • Meng Li and Ron Goldman. "Limits of sums for binomial and Eulerian numbers and their associated distributions." Discrete Mathematics 343.7 (2020): 111870.
  • Anthony Mendes and Jeffrey Remmel, Generating functions from symmetric functions, Preliminary version of book, available from Jeffrey Remmel's home page http://math.ucsd.edu/~remmel/
  • K. Mittelstaedt, A stochastic approach to Eulerian numbers, Amer. Math. Mnthly, 127:7 (2020), 618-628.
  • T. K. Petersen, Eulerian Numbers, Birkhauser, 2015.
  • J. Riordan, An Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis, Wiley, 1958, p. 215.
  • R. Sedgewick and P. Flajolet, An Introduction to the Analysis of Algorithms, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1996.
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Figure M3416, Academic Press, 1995.
  • H. S. Wall, Analytic Theory of Continued Fractions, Chelsea, 1973, see p. 208.
  • D. B. West, Combinatorial Mathematics, Cambridge, 2021, p. 101.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • GAP
    Flat(List([1..10],n->List([1..n],k->Sum([0..k],j->(-1)^j*(k-j)^n*Binomial(n+1,j))))); # Muniru A Asiru, Jun 29 2018
    
  • Haskell
    import Data.List (genericLength)
    a008292 n k = a008292_tabl !! (n-1) !! (k-1)
    a008292_row n = a008292_tabl !! (n-1)
    a008292_tabl = iterate f [1] where
       f xs = zipWith (+)
         (zipWith (*) ([0] ++ xs) (reverse ks)) (zipWith (*) (xs ++ [0]) ks)
         where ks = [1 .. 1 + genericLength xs]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, May 07 2013
    
  • Magma
    Eulerian:= func< n,k | (&+[(-1)^j*Binomial(n+1,j)*(k-j+1)^n: j in [0..k+1]]) >; [[Eulerian(n,k): k in [0..n-1]]: n in [1..10]]; // G. C. Greubel, Apr 15 2019
  • Maple
    A008292 := proc(n,k) option remember; if k < 1 or k > n then 0; elif k = 1 or k = n then 1; else k*procname(n-1,k)+(n-k+1)*procname(n-1,k-1) ; end if; end proc:
  • Mathematica
    t[n_, k_] = Sum[(-1)^j*(k-j)^n*Binomial[n+1, j], {j, 0, k}];
    Flatten[Table[t[n, k], {n, 1, 10}, {k, 1, n}]] (* Jean-François Alcover, May 31 2011, after Michael Somos *)
    Flatten[Table[CoefficientList[(1-x)^(k+1)*PolyLog[-k, x]/x, x], {k, 1, 10}]] (* Vaclav Kotesovec, Aug 27 2015 *)
    Table[Tally[
       Count[#, x_ /; x > 0] & /@ (Differences /@
          Permutations[Range[n]])][[;; , 2]], {n, 10}] (* Li Han, Oct 11 2020 *)
  • PARI
    {T(n, k) = if( k<1 || k>n, 0, if( n==1, 1, k * T(n-1, k) + (n-k+1) * T(n-1, k-1)))}; /* Michael Somos, Jul 19 1999 */
    
  • PARI
    {T(n, k) = sum( j=0, k, (-1)^j * (k-j)^n * binomial( n+1, j))}; /* Michael Somos, Jul 19 1999 */
    
  • PARI
    {A(n,c)=c^(n+c-1)+sum(i=1,c-1,(-1)^i/i!*(c-i)^(n+c-1)*prod(j=1,i,n+c+1-j))}
    
  • Python
    from sympy import binomial
    def T(n, k): return sum([(-1)**j*(k - j)**n*binomial(n + 1, j) for j in range(k + 1)])
    for n in range(1, 11): print([T(n, k) for k in range(1, n + 1)]) # Indranil Ghosh, Nov 08 2017
    
  • R
    T <- function(n, k) {
      S <- numeric()
      for (j in 0:k) S <- c(S, (-1)^j*(k-j)^n*choose(n+1, j))
      return(sum(S))
    }
    for (n in 1:10){
      for (k in 1:n) print(T(n,k))
    } # Indranil Ghosh, Nov 08 2017
    
  • Sage
    [[sum((-1)^j*binomial(n+1, j)*(k-j)^n for j in (0..k)) for k in (1..n)] for n in (1..12)] # G. C. Greubel, Feb 23 2019
    

Formula

T(n, k) = k * T(n-1, k) + (n-k+1) * T(n-1, k-1), T(1, 1) = 1.
T(n, k) = Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^j * (k-j)^n * binomial(n+1, j).
Row sums = n! = A000142(n) unless n=0. - Michael Somos, Mar 17 2011
E.g.f. A(x, q) = Sum_{n>0} (Sum_{k=1..n} T(n, k) * q^k) * x^n / n! = q * ( e^(q*x) - e^x ) / ( q*e^x - e^(q*x) ) satisfies dA / dx = (A + 1) * (A + q). - Michael Somos, Mar 17 2011
For a column listing, n-th term: T(c, n) = c^(n+c-1) + Sum_{i=1..c-1} (-1)^i/i!*(c-i)^(n+c-1)*Product_{j=1..i} (n+c+1-j). - Randall L Rathbun, Jan 23 2002
From John Robertson (jpr2718(AT)aol.com), Sep 02 2002: (Start)
Four characterizations of Eulerian numbers T(i, n):
1. T(0, n)=1 for n>=1, T(i, 1)=0 for i>=1, T(i, n) = (n-i)T(i-1, n-1) + (i+1)T(i, n-1).
2. T(i, n) = Sum_{j=0..i} (-1)^j*binomial(n+1,j)*(i-j+1)^n for n>=1, i>=0.
3. Let C_n be the unit cube in R^n with vertices (e_1, e_2, ..., e_n) where each e_i is 0 or 1 and all 2^n combinations are used. Then T(i, n)/n! is the volume of C_n between the hyperplanes x_1 + x_2 + ... + x_n = i and x_1 + x_2 + ... + x_n = i+1. Hence T(i, n)/n! is the probability that i <= X_1 + X_2 + ... + X_n < i+1 where the X_j are independent uniform [0, 1] distributions. - See Ehrenborg & Readdy reference.
4. Let f(i, n) = T(i, n)/n!. The f(i, n) are the unique coefficients so that (1/(r-1)^(n+1)) Sum_{i=0..n-1} f(i, n) r^{i+1} = Sum_{j>=0} (j^n)/(r^j) whenever n>=1 and abs(r)>1. (End)
O.g.f. for n-th row: (1-x)^(n+1)*polylog(-n, x)/x. - Vladeta Jovovic, Sep 02 2002
Triangle T(n, k), n>0 and k>0, read by rows; given by [0, 1, 0, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0, 5, 0, 6, ...] DELTA [1, 0, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0, 5, 0, 6, ...] (positive integers interspersed with 0's) where DELTA is Deléham's operator defined in A084938.
Sum_{k=1..n} T(n, k)*2^k = A000629(n). - Philippe Deléham, Jun 05 2004
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)
From the relations between the h- and f-polynomials of permutohedra and reciprocals of e.g.f.s described in A049019: (t-1)((t-1)d/dx)^n 1/(t-exp(x)) evaluated at x=0 gives the n-th Eulerian row polynomial in t and the n-th row polynomial in (t-1) of A019538 and A090582. From the Comtet and Copeland references in A139605: ((t+exp(x)-1)d/dx)^(n+1) x gives pairs of the Eulerian polynomials in t as the coefficients of x^0 and x^1 in its Taylor series expansion in x. - Tom Copeland, Oct 05 2008
G.f: 1/(1-x/(1-x*y/1-2*x/(1-2*x*y/(1-3*x/(1-3*x*y/(1-... (continued fraction). - Paul Barry, Mar 24 2010
If n is odd prime, then the following consecutive 2*n+1 terms are 1 modulo n: a((n-1)*(n-2)/2+i), i=0..2*n. This chain of terms is maximal in the sense that neither the previous term nor the following one are 1 modulo n. - _Vladimir Shevelev, Jul 01 2011
From Peter Bala, Sep 29 2011: (Start)
For k = 0,1,2,... put G(k,x,t) := x -(1+2^k*t)*x^2/2 +(1+2^k*t+3^k*t^2)*x^3/3-(1+2^k*t+3^k*t^2+4^k*t^3)*x^4/4+.... Then the series reversion of G(k,x,t) with respect to x gives an e.g.f. for the present table when k = 0 and for A008517 when k = 1.
The e.g.f. B(x,t) := compositional inverse with respect to x of G(0,x,t) = (exp(x)-exp(x*t))/(exp(x*t)-t*exp(x)) = x + (1+t)*x^2/2! + (1+4*t+t^2)*x^3/3! + ... satisfies the autonomous differential equation dB/dx = (1+B)*(1+t*B) = 1 + (1+t)*B + t*B^2.
Applying [Bergeron et al., Theorem 1] gives a combinatorial interpretation for the Eulerian polynomials: A(n,t) counts plane increasing trees on n vertices where each vertex has outdegree <= 2, the vertices of outdegree 1 come in 1+t colors and the vertices of outdegree 2 come in t colors. An example is given below. Cf. A008517. Applying [Dominici, Theorem 4.1] gives the following method for calculating the Eulerian polynomials: Let f(x,t) = (1+x)*(1+t*x) and let D be the operator f(x,t)*d/dx. Then A(n+1,t) = D^n(f(x,t)) evaluated at x = 0.
(End)
With e.g.f. A(x,t) = G[x,(t-1)]-1 in Copeland's 2008 comment, the compositional inverse is Ainv(x,t) = log(t-(t-1)/(1+x))/(t-1). - Tom Copeland, Oct 11 2011
T(2*n+1,n+1) = (2*n+2)*T(2*n,n). (E.g., 66 = 6*11, 2416 = 8*302, ...) - Gary Detlefs, Nov 11 2011
E.g.f.: (1-y) / (1 - y*exp( (1-y)*x )). - Geoffrey Critzer, Nov 10 2012
From Peter Bala, Mar 12 2013: (Start)
Let {A(n,x)} n>=1 denote the sequence of Eulerian polynomials beginning [1, 1 + x, 1 + 4*x + x^2, ...]. Given two complex numbers a and b, the polynomial sequence defined by R(n,x) := (x+b)^n*A(n+1,(x+a)/(x+b)), n >= 0, satisfies the recurrence equation R(n+1,x) = d/dx((x+a)*(x+b)*R(n,x)). These polynomials give the row generating polynomials for several triangles in the database including A019538 (a = 0, b = 1), A156992 (a = 1, b = 1), A185421 (a = (1+i)/2, b = (1-i)/2), A185423 (a = exp(i*Pi/3), b = exp(-i*Pi/3)) and A185896 (a = i, b = -i).
(End)
E.g.f.: 1 + x/(T(0) - x*y), where T(k) = 1 + x*(y-1)/(1 + (k+1)/T(k+1) ); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Nov 07 2013
From Tom Copeland, Sep 18 2014: (Start)
A) Bivariate e.g.f. A(x,a,b)= (e^(ax)-e^(bx))/(a*e^(bx)-b*e^(ax)) = x + (a+b)*x^2/2! + (a^2+4ab+b^2)*x^3/3! + (a^3+11a^2b+11ab^2+b^3)x^4/4! + ...
B) B(x,a,b)= log((1+ax)/(1+bx))/(a-b) = x - (a+b)x^2/2 + (a^2+ab+b^2)x^3/3 - (a^3+a^2b+ab^2+b^3)x^4/4 + ... = log(1+u.*x), with (u.)^n = u_n = h_(n-1)(a,b) a complete homogeneous polynomial, is the compositional inverse of A(x,a,b) in x (see Drake, p. 56).
C) A(x) satisfies dA/dx = (1+a*A)(1+b*A) and can be written in terms of a Weierstrass elliptic function (see Buchstaber & Bunkova).
D) The bivariate Eulerian row polynomials are generated by the iterated derivative ((1+ax)(1+bx)d/dx)^n x evaluated at x=0 (see A145271).
E) A(x,a,b)= -(e^(-ax)-e^(-bx))/(a*e^(-ax)-b*e^(-bx)), A(x,-1,-1) = x/(1+x), and B(x,-1,-1) = x/(1-x).
F) FGL(x,y) = A(B(x,a,b) + B(y,a,b),a,b) = (x+y+(a+b)xy)/(1-ab*xy) is called the hyperbolic formal group law and related to a generalized cohomology theory by Lenart and Zainoulline. (End)
For x > 1, the n-th Eulerian polynomial A(n,x) = (x - 1)^n * log(x) * Integral_{u>=0} (ceiling(u))^n * x^(-u) du. - Peter Bala, Feb 06 2015
Sum_{j>=0} j^n/e^j, for n>=0, equals Sum_{k=1..n} T(n,k)e^k/(e-1)^(n+1), a rational function in the variable "e" which evaluates, approximately, to n! when e = A001113 = 2.71828... - Richard R. Forberg, Feb 15 2015
For a fixed k, T(n,k) ~ k^n, proved by induction. - Ran Pan, Oct 12 2015
From A145271, multiply the n-th diagonal (with n=0 the main diagonal) of the lower triangular Pascal matrix by g_n = (d/dx)^n (1+a*x)*(1+b*x) evaluated at x= 0, i.e., g_0 = 1, g_1 = (a+b), g_2 = 2ab, and g_n = 0 otherwise, to obtain the tridiagonal matrix VP with VP(n,k) = binomial(n,k) g_(n-k). Then the m-th bivariate row polynomial of this entry is P(m,a,b) = (1, 0, 0, 0, ...) [VP * S]^(m-1) (1, a+b, 2ab, 0, ...)^T, where S is the shift matrix A129185, representing differentiation in the divided powers basis x^n/n!. Also, P(m,a,b) = (1, 0, 0, 0, ...) [VP * S]^m (0, 1, 0, ...)^T. - Tom Copeland, Aug 02 2016
Cumulatively summing a row generates the n starting terms of the n-th differences of the n-th powers. Applying the finite difference method to x^n, these terms correspond to those before constant n! in the lowest difference row. E.g., T(4,k) is summed as 0+1=1, 1+11=12, 12+11=23, 23+1=4!. See A101101, A101104, A101100, A179457. - Andy Nicol, May 25 2024

Extensions

Thanks to Michael Somos for additional comments.
Further comments from Christian G. Bower, May 12 2000

A000165 Double factorial of even numbers: (2n)!! = 2^n*n!.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 8, 48, 384, 3840, 46080, 645120, 10321920, 185794560, 3715891200, 81749606400, 1961990553600, 51011754393600, 1428329123020800, 42849873690624000, 1371195958099968000, 46620662575398912000, 1678343852714360832000, 63777066403145711616000
Offset: 0

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Comments

a(n) is also the size of the automorphism group of the graph (edge graph) of the n-dimensional hypercube and also of the geometric automorphism group of the hypercube (the two groups are isomorphic). This group is an extension of an elementary Abelian group (C_2)^n by S_n. (C_2 is the cyclic group with two elements and S_n is the symmetric group.) - Avi Peretz (njk(AT)netvision.net.il), Feb 21 2001
Then a(n) appears in the power series: sqrt(1+sin(y)) = Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^floor(n/2)*y^(n)/a(n) and sqrt((1+cos(y))/2) = Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n*y^(2n)/a(2n). - Benoit Cloitre, Feb 02 2002
Appears to be the BinomialMean transform of A001907. See A075271. - John W. Layman, Sep 28 2002
Number of n X n monomial matrices with entries 0, +-1.
Also number of linear signed orders.
Define a "downgrade" to be the permutation d which places the items of a permutation p in descending order. This note concerns those permutations that are equal to their double-downgrades. The number of permutations of order 2n having this property are equinumerous with those of order 2n+1. a(n) = number of double-downgrading permutations of order 2n and 2n+1. - Eugene McDonnell (eemcd(AT)mac.com), Oct 27 2003
a(n) = (Integral_{x=0..Pi/2} cos(x)^(2*n+1) dx) where the denominators are b(n) = (2*n)!/(n!*2^n). - Al Hakanson (hawkuu(AT)excite.com), Mar 02 2004
1 + (1/2)x - (1/8)x^2 - (1/48)x^3 + (1/384)x^4 + ... = sqrt(1+sin(x)).
a(n)*(-1)^n = coefficient of the leading term of the (n+1)-th derivative of arctan(x), see Hildebrand link. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 14 2006
a(n) is the Pfaffian of the skew-symmetric 2n X 2n matrix whose (i,j) entry is j for iDavid Callan, Sep 25 2006
a(n) is the number of increasing plane trees with n+1 edges. (In a plane tree, each subtree of the root is an ordered tree but the subtrees of the root may be cyclically rotated.) Increasing means the vertices are labeled 0,1,2,...,n+1 and each child has a greater label than its parent. Cf. A001147 for increasing ordered trees, A000142 for increasing unordered trees and A000111 for increasing 0-1-2 trees. - David Callan, Dec 22 2006
Hamed Hatami and Pooya Hatami prove that this is an upper bound on the cardinality of any minimal dominating set in C_{2n+1}^n, the Cartesian product of n copies of the cycle of size 2n+1, where 2n+1 is a prime. - Jonathan Vos Post, Jan 03 2007
This sequence and (1,-2,0,0,0,0,...) form a reciprocal pair under the list partition transform and associated operations described in A133314. - Tom Copeland, Oct 29 2007
a(n) = number of permutations of the multiset {1,1,2,2,...,n,n,n+1,n+1} such that between the two occurrences of i, there is exactly one entry >i, for i=1,2,...,n. Example: a(2) = 8 counts 121323, 131232, 213123, 231213, 232131, 312132, 321312, 323121. Proof: There is always exactly one entry between the two 1s (when n>=1). Given a permutation p in A(n) (counted by a(n)), record the position i of the first 1, then delete both 1s and subtract 1 from every entry to get a permutation q in A(n-1). The mapping p -> (i,q) is a bijection from A(n) to the Cartesian product [1,2n] X A(n-1). - David Callan, Nov 29 2007
Row sums of A028338. - Paul Barry, Feb 07 2009
a(n) is the number of ways to seat n married couples in a row so that everyone is next to their spouse. Compare A007060. - Geoffrey Critzer, Mar 29 2009
From Gary W. Adamson, Apr 21 2009: (Start)
Equals (-1)^n * (1, 1, 2, 8, 48, ...) dot (1, -3, 5, -7, 9, ...).
Example: a(4) = 384 = (1, 1, 2, 8, 48) dot (1, -3, 5, -7, 9) = (1, -3, 10, -56, 432). (End)
exp(x/2) = Sum_{n>=0} x^n/a(n). - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Sep 07 2009
Assuming n starts at 0, a(n) appears to be the number of Gray codes on n bits. It certainly is the number of Gray codes on n bits isomorphic to the canonical one. Proof: There are 2^n different starting positions for each code. Also, each code has a particular pattern of bit positions that are flipped (for instance, 1 2 1 3 1 2 1 for n=3), and these bit position patterns can be permuted in n! ways. - D. J. Schreffler (ds1404(AT)txstate.edu), Jul 18 2010
E.g.f. of 0,1,2,8,... is x/(1-2x/(2-2x/(3-8x/(4-8x/(5-18x/(6-18x/(7-... (continued fraction). - Paul Barry, Jan 17 2011
Number of increasing 2-colored trees with choice of two colors for each edge. In general, if we replace 2 with k we get the number of increasing k-colored trees. For example, for k=3 we get the triple factorial numbers. - Wenjin Woan, May 31 2011
a(n) = row sums of triangle A193229. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 18 2011
Also the number of permutations of 2n (or of 2n+1) that are equal to their reverse-complements. (See the Egge reference.) Note that the double-downgrade described in the preceding comment (McDonnell) is equivalent to the reverse-complement. - Justin M. Troyka, Aug 11 2011
The e.g.f. can be used to form a generator, [1/(1-2x)] d/dx, for A000108, so a(n) can be applied to A145271 to generate the Catalan numbers. - Tom Copeland, Oct 01 2011
The e.g.f. of 1/a(n) is BesselI(0,sqrt(2*x)). See Abramowitz-Stegun (reference and link under A008277), p. 375, 9.6.10. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jan 09 2012
a(n) = order of the largest imprimitive group of degree 2n with n systems of imprimitivity (see [Miller], p. 203). - L. Edson Jeffery, Feb 05 2012
Row sums of triangle A208057. - Gary W. Adamson, Feb 22 2012
a(n) is the number of ways to designate a subset of elements in each n-permutation. a(n) = A000142(n) + A001563(n) + A001804(n) + A001805(n) + A001806(n) + A001807(n) + A035038(n) * n!. - Geoffrey Critzer, Nov 08 2012
For n>1, a(n) is the order of the Coxeter groups (also called Weyl groups) of types B_n and C_n. - Tom Edgar, Nov 05 2013
For m>0, k*a(m-1) is the m-th cumulant of the chi-squared probability distribution for k degrees of freedom. - Stanislav Sykora, Jun 27 2014
a(n) with 0 prepended is the binomial transform of A120765. - Vladimir Reshetnikov, Oct 28 2015
Exponential self-convolution of A001147. - Vladimir Reshetnikov, Oct 08 2016
Also the order of the automorphism group of the n-ladder rung graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Jul 22 2017
a(n) is the order of the group O_n(Z) = {A in M_n(Z): A*A^T = I_n}, the group of n X n orthogonal matrices over the integers. - Jianing Song, Mar 29 2021
a(n) is the number of ways to tile a (3n,3n)-benzel or a (3n+1,3n+2)-benzel using left stones and two kinds of bones; see Defant et al., below. - James Propp, Jul 22 2023
a(n) is the number of labeled histories for a labeled topology with the modified lodgepole shape and n+1 cherry nodes. - Noah A Rosenberg, Jan 16 2025

Examples

			The following permutations and their reversals are all of the permutations of order 5 having the double-downgrade property:
  0 1 2 3 4
  0 3 2 1 4
  1 0 2 4 3
  1 4 2 0 3
G.f. = 1 + 2*x + 8*x^2 + 48*x^3 + 384*x^4 + 3840*x^5 + 46080*x^6 + 645120*x^7 + ...
		

References

  • 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

Cf. A000142 (n!), A001147 ((2n-1)!!), A032184 (2^n*(n-1)!).
This sequence gives the row sums in A060187, and (-1)^n*a(n) the alternating row sums in A039757.
Also row sums in A028338.
Column k=2 of A329070.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a000165 n = product [2, 4 .. 2 * n]  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 28 2015
    
  • Magma
    [2^n*Factorial(n): n in [0..35]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Apr 22 2011
    
  • Magma
    I:=[2,8]; [1] cat [n le 2 select I[n]  else (3*n-1)*Self(n-1)-2*(n-1)^2*Self(n-2): n in [1..35] ]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Feb 19 2015
    
  • Maple
    A000165 := proc(n) option remember; if n <= 1 then 1 else n*A000165(n-2); fi; end;
    ZL:=[S, {a = Atom, b = Atom, S = Prod(X,Sequence(Prod(X,b))), X = Sequence(b,card >= 0)}, labelled]: seq(combstruct[count](ZL, size=n), n=0..17); # Zerinvary Lajos, Mar 26 2008
    G(x):=(1-2*x)^(-1): f[0]:=G(x): for n from 1 to 29 do f[n]:=diff(f[n-1],x) od: x:=0: seq(f[n],n=0..17); # Zerinvary Lajos, Apr 03 2009
    A000165 := proc(n) doublefactorial(2*n) ; end proc; seq(A000165(n),n=0..10) ; # R. J. Mathar, Oct 20 2009
  • Mathematica
    Table[(2 n)!!, {n, 30}] (* Vladimir Joseph Stephan Orlovsky, Dec 13 2008 *)
    (2 Range[0, 30])!! (* Harvey P. Dale, Jan 23 2015 *)
    RecurrenceTable[{a[n] == 2 n*a[n-1], a[0] == 1}, a, {n,0,30}] (* Ray Chandler, Jul 30 2015 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=n!<Charles R Greathouse IV, Feb 11 2011
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = prod( k=1, n, 2*k)}; /* Michael Somos, Jan 04 2013 */
    
  • Python
    from math import factorial
    def A000165(n): return factorial(n)<Chai Wah Wu, Jan 24 2023
    
  • SageMath
    [2^n*factorial(n) for n in range(31)] # G. C. Greubel, Jul 21 2024

Formula

E.g.f.: 1/(1-2*x).
a(n) = A001044(n)/A000142(n)*A000079(n) = Product_{i=0..n-1} (2*i+2) = 2^n*Pochhammer(1,n). - Daniel Dockery (peritus(AT)gmail.com), Jun 13 2003
D-finite with recurrence a(n) = 2*n * a(n-1), n>0, a(0)=1. - Paul Barry, Aug 26 2004
This is the binomial mean transform of A001907. See Spivey and Steil (2006). - Michael Z. Spivey (mspivey(AT)ups.edu), Feb 26 2006
a(n) = Integral_{x>=0} x^n*exp(-x/2)/2 dx. - Paul Barry, Jan 28 2008
G.f.: 1/(1-2x/(1-2x/(1-4x/(1-4x/(1-6x/(1-6x/(1-.... (continued fraction). - Paul Barry, Feb 07 2009
a(n) = A006882(2*n). - R. J. Mathar, Oct 20 2009
From Gary W. Adamson, Jul 18 2011: (Start)
a(n) = upper left term in M^n, M = a production matrix (twice Pascal's triangle deleting the first "2", with the rest zeros; cf. A028326):
2, 2, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...
2, 4, 2, 0, 0, 0, ...
2, 6, 6, 2, 0, 0, ...
2, 8, 12, 8, 2, 0, ...
2, 10, 20, 20, 10, 2, ...
... (End)
From Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Apr 11 2013, May 01 2013, May 24 2013, Sep 30 2013, Oct 27 2013: (Start)
Continued fractions:
G.f.: 1 + x*(Q(0) - 1)/(x+1) where Q(k) = 1 + (2*k+2)/(1-x/(x+1/Q(k+1))).
G.f.: 1/Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 + 2*k*x - 2*x*(k+1)/Q(k+1).
G.f.: G(0)/2 where G(k) = 1 + 1/(1 - x*(2*k+2)/(x*(2*k+2) + 1/G(k+1))).
G.f.: 1/Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 - x*(4*k+2) - 4*x^2*(k+1)^2/Q(k+1).
G.f.: R(0) where R(k) = 1 - x*(2*k+2)/(x*(2*k+2)-1/(1-x*(2*k+2)/(x*(2*k+2) -1/R(k+1)))). (End)
a(n) = (2n-2)*a(n-2) + (2n-1)*a(n-1), n>1. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Aug 06 2013
From Peter Bala, Feb 18 2015: (Start)
Recurrence equation: a(n) = (3*n - 1)*a(n-1) - 2*(n - 1)^2*a(n-2) with a(1) = 2 and a(2) = 8.
The sequence b(n) = A068102(n) also satisfies this second-order recurrence. This leads to the generalized continued fraction expansion lim_{n -> oo} b(n)/a(n) = log(2) = 1/(2 - 2/(5 - 8/(8 - 18/(11 - ... - 2*(n - 1)^2/((3*n - 1) - ... ))))). (End)
From Amiram Eldar, Jun 25 2020: (Start)
Sum_{n>=0} 1/a(n) = sqrt(e) (A019774).
Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n/a(n) = 1/sqrt(e) (A092605). (End)
Limit_{n->oo} a(n)^4 / (n * A134372(n)) = Pi. - Daniel Suteu, Apr 09 2022
a(n) = 1/([x^n] hypergeom([1], [1], x/2)). - Peter Luschny, Sep 13 2024
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} k!*(n-k)!*binomial(n,k)^2. - Ridouane Oudra, Jul 13 2025

A019538 Triangle of numbers T(n,k) = k!*Stirling2(n,k) read by rows (n >= 1, 1 <= k <= n).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 6, 6, 1, 14, 36, 24, 1, 30, 150, 240, 120, 1, 62, 540, 1560, 1800, 720, 1, 126, 1806, 8400, 16800, 15120, 5040, 1, 254, 5796, 40824, 126000, 191520, 141120, 40320, 1, 510, 18150, 186480, 834120, 1905120, 2328480, 1451520, 362880, 1, 1022, 55980, 818520, 5103000, 16435440, 29635200, 30240000, 16329600, 3628800
Offset: 1

Views

Author

N. J. A. Sloane and Manfred Goebel (goebel(AT)informatik.uni-tuebingen.de), Dec 11 1996

Keywords

Comments

Number of ways n labeled objects can be distributed into k nonempty parcels. Also number of special terms in n variables with maximal degree k.
In older terminology these are called differences of 0. - Michael Somos, Oct 08 2003
Number of surjections (onto functions) from an n-element set to a k-element set.
Also coefficients (in ascending order) of so-called ordered Bell polynomials.
(k-1)!*Stirling2(n,k-1) is the number of chain topologies on an n-set having k open sets [Stephen].
Number of set compositions (ordered set partitions) of n items into k parts. Number of k dimensional 'faces' of the n dimensional permutohedron (see Simion, p. 162). - Mitch Harris, Jan 16 2007
Correction of comment before: Number of (n-k)-dimensional 'faces' of the permutohedron of order n (an (n-1)-dimensional polytope). - Tilman Piesk, Oct 29 2014
This array is related to the reciprocal of an e.g.f. as sketched in A133314. For example, the coefficient of the fourth-order term in the Taylor series expansion of 1/(a(0) + a(1) x + a(2) x^2/2! + a(3) x^3/3! + ...) is a(0)^(-5) * {24 a(1)^4 - 36 a(1)^2 a(2) a(0) + [8 a(1) a(3) + 6 a(2)^2] a(0)^2 - a(4) a(0)^3}. The unsigned coefficients characterize the P3 permutohedron depicted on page 10 in the Loday link with 24 vertices (0-D faces), 36 edges (1-D faces), 6 squares (2-D faces), 8 hexagons (2-D faces) and 1 3-D permutohedron. Summing coefficients over like dimensions gives A019538 and A090582. Compare to A133437 for the associahedron. - Tom Copeland, Sep 29 2008, Oct 07 2008
Further to the comments of Tom Copeland above, the permutohedron of type A_3 can be taken as the truncated octahedron. Its dual is the tetrakis hexahedron, a simplicial polyhedron, with f-vector (1,14,36,24) giving the fourth row of this triangle. See the Wikipedia entry and [Fomin and Reading p. 21]. The corresponding h-vectors of permutohedra of type A give the rows of the triangle of Eulerian numbers A008292. See A145901 and A145902 for the array of f-vectors for type B and type D permutohedra respectively. - Peter Bala, Oct 26 2008
Subtriangle of triangle in A131689. - Philippe Deléham, Nov 03 2008
Since T(n,k) counts surjective functions and surjective functions are "consistent", T(n,k) satisfies a binomial identity, namely, T(n,x+y) = Sum_{j=0..n} C(n,j)*T(j,x)*T(n-j,y). For definition of consistent functions and a generalized binomial identity, see "Toy stories and combinatorial identities" in the link section below. - Dennis P. Walsh, Feb 24 2012
T(n,k) is the number of labeled forests on n+k vertices satisfying the following two conditions: (i) each forest consists of exactly k rooted trees with roots labeled 1, 2, ..., k; (ii) every root has at least one child vertex. - Dennis P. Walsh, Feb 24 2012
The triangle is the inverse binomial transform of triangle A028246, deleting the left column and shifting up one row. - Gary W. Adamson, Mar 05 2012
See A074909 for associations among this array and the Bernoulli polynomials and their umbral compositional inverses. - Tom Copeland, Nov 14 2014
E.g.f. for the shifted signed polynomials is G(x,t) = (e^t-1)/[1+(1+x)(e^t-1)] = 1-(1+x)(e^t-1) + (1+x)^2(e^t-1)^2 - ... (see also A008292 and A074909), which has the infinitesimal generator g(x,u)d/du = [(1-x*u)(1-(1+x)u)]d/du, i.e., exp[t*g(x,u)d/du]u eval. at u=0 gives G(x,t), and dG(x,t)/dt = g(x,G(x,t)). The compositional inverse is log((1-xt)/(1-(1+x)t)). G(x,t) is a generating series associated to the generalized Hirzebruch genera. See the G. Rzadowski link for the relation of the derivatives of g(x,u) to solutions of the Riccatt differential equation, soliton solns. to the KdV equation, and the Eulerian and Bernoulli numbers. In addition A145271 connects products of derivatives of g(x,u) and the refined Eulerian numbers to the inverse of G(x,t), which gives the normalized, reverse face polynomials of the simplices (A135278, divided by n+1). See A028246 for the generator g(x,u)d/dx. - Tom Copeland, Nov 21 2014
For connections to toric varieties and Eulerian polynomials, see the Dolgachev and Lunts and the Stembridge links. - Tom Copeland, Dec 31 2015
See A008279 for a relation between the e.g.f.s enumerating the faces of permutahedra (this entry) and stellahedra. - Tom Copeland, Nov 14 2016
T(n, k) appears in a Worpitzky identity relating monomials to binomials: x^n = Sum_{k=1..n} T(n, k)*binomial(x,k), n >= 1. See eq. (11.) of the Worpitzky link on p. 209. The relation to the Eulerian numbers is given there in eqs. (14.) and (15.). See the formula below relating to A008292. See also Graham et al. eq. (6.10) (relating monomials to falling factorials) on p. 248 (2nd ed. p. 262). The Worpitzky identity given in the Graham et al. reference as eq. (6.37) (2nd ed. p. 269) is eq. (5.), p. 207, of Worpitzky. - Wolfdieter Lang, Mar 10 2017
T(n, m) is also the number of minimum clique coverings and minimum matchings in the complete bipartite graph K_{m,n}. - Eric W. Weisstein, Apr 26 2017
From the Hasan and Franco and Hasan papers: The m-permutohedra for m=1,2,3,4 are the line segment, hexagon, truncated octahedron and omnitruncated 5-cell. The first three are well-known from the study of elliptic models, brane tilings and brane brick models. The m+1 torus can be tiled by a single (m+2)-permutohedron. Relations to toric Calabi-Yau Kahler manifolds are also discussed. - Tom Copeland, May 14 2020
From Manfred Boergens, Jul 25 2021: (Start)
Number of n X k binary matrices with row sums = 1 and no zero columns. These matrices are a subset of the matrices defining A183109.
The distribution into parcels in the leading comment can be regarded as a covering of [n] by tuples (A_1,...,A_k) in P([n])^k with nonempty and disjoint A_j, with P(.) denoting the power set (corrected for clarity by Manfred Boergens, May 26 2024). For the non-disjoint case see A183109 and A218695.
For tuples with "nonempty" dropped see A089072. For tuples with "nonempty and disjoint" dropped see A092477 and A329943 (amendment by Manfred Boergens, Jun 24 2024). (End)

Examples

			The triangle T(n, k) begins:
  n\k 1    2     3      4       5        6        7        8        9      10
  1:  1
  2:  1    2
  3:  1    6     6
  4:  1   14    36     24
  5:  1   30   150    240     120
  6:  1   62   540   1560    1800      720
  7:  1  126  1806   8400   16800    15120     5040
  8:  1  254  5796  40824  126000   191520   141120    40320
  9:  1  510 18150 186480  834120  1905120  2328480  1451520   362880
  10: 1 1022 55980 818520 5103000 16435440 29635200 30240000 16329600 3628800
  ... Reformatted and extended - _Wolfdieter Lang_, Oct 04 2014
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
T(4,1) = 1: {1234}. T(4,2) = 14: {1}{234} (4 ways), {12}{34} (6 ways), {123}{4} (4 ways). T(4,3) = 36: {12}{3}{4} (12 ways), {1}{23}{4} (12 ways), {1}{2}{34} (12 ways). T(4,4) = 1: {1}{2}{3}{4} (1 way).
		

References

  • A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, p. 89, ex. 1; also p. 210.
  • Miklos Bona, Combinatorics of Permutations, Chapman and Hall,2004, p.12.
  • G. Boole, A Treatise On The Calculus of Finite Differences, Dover Publications, 1960, p. 20.
  • H. T. Davis, Tables of the Mathematical Functions. Vols. 1 and 2, 2nd ed., 1963, Vol. 3 (with V. J. Fisher), 1962; Principia Press of Trinity Univ., San Antonio, TX, Vol. 2, p. 212.
  • R. L. Graham, D. E. Knuth and O. Patashnik, Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, 1989, p. 155. Also eqs.(6.10) and (6.37).
  • Kiran S. Kedlaya and Andrew V. Sutherland, Computing L -Series of Hyperelliptic Curves in Algorithmic Number Theory Lecture Notes in Computer Science Volume 5011/2008.
  • T. K. Petersen, Eulerian Numbers, Birkhauser, 2015, Section 5.6.
  • J. Riordan, An Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis, Wiley, 1958, p. 33.
  • J. F. Steffensen, Interpolation, 2nd ed., Chelsea, NY, 1950, see p. 54.
  • A. H. Voigt, Theorie der Zahlenreihen und der Reihengleichungen, Goschen, Leipzig, 1911, p. 31.
  • E. Whittaker and G. Robinson, The Calculus of Observations, Blackie, London, 4th ed., 1949; p. 7.

Crossrefs

Row sums give A000670. Maximal terms in rows give A002869. Central terms T(2k-1,k) give A233734.
Diagonal is n! (A000142). 2nd diagonal is A001286. 3rd diagonal is A037960.
Reflected version of A090582. A371568 is another version.
See also the two closely related triangles: A008277(n, k) = T(n, k)/k! (Stirling numbers of second kind) and A028246(n, k) = T(n, k)/k.
Cf. A033282 'faces' of the associahedron.
Cf. A008292, A047969, A145901, A145902. - Peter Bala, Oct 26 2008
Visible in the 3-D array in A249042.
See also A000182.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a019538 n k = a019538_tabl !! (n-1) !! (k-1)
    a019538_row n = a019538_tabl !! (n-1)
    a019538_tabl = iterate f [1] where
       f xs = zipWith (*) [1..] $ zipWith (+) ([0] ++ xs) (xs ++ [0])
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 15 2013
    
  • Maple
    with(combinat): A019538 := (n,k)->k!*stirling2(n,k);
  • Mathematica
    Table[k! StirlingS2[n, k], {n, 9}, {k, n}] // Flatten
  • PARI
    {T(n, k) = if( k<0 || k>n, 0, sum(i=0, k, (-1)^i * binomial(k, i) * (k-i)^n))}; /* Michael Somos, Oct 08 2003 */
    
  • Sage
    def T(n, k): return factorial(k)*stirling_number2(n,k) # Danny Rorabaugh, Oct 10 2015

Formula

T(n, k) = k*(T(n-1, k-1)+T(n-1, k)) with T(0, 0) = 1 [or T(1, 1) = 1]. - Henry Bottomley, Mar 02 2001
E.g.f.: (y*(exp(x)-1) - exp(x))/(y*(exp(x)-1) - 1). - Vladeta Jovovic, Jan 30 2003
Equals [0, 1, 0, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0, 5, ...] DELTA [1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, ...] where DELTA is Deléham's operator defined in A084938.
T(n, k) = Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^(k-j)*j^n*binomial(k, j). - Mario Catalani (mario.catalani(AT)unito.it), Nov 28 2003. See Graham et al., eq. (6.19), p. 251. For a proof see Bert Seghers, Jun 29 2013.
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n, k)(-1)^(n-k) = 1, Sum_{k=0..n} T(n, k)(-1)^k = (-1)^n. - Mario Catalani (mario.catalani(AT)unito.it), Dec 11 2003
O.g.f. for n-th row: polylog(-n, x/(1+x))/(x+x^2). - Vladeta Jovovic, Jan 30 2005
E.g.f.: 1 / (1 + t*(1-exp(x))). - Tom Copeland, Oct 13 2008
From Peter Bala, Oct 26 2008: (Start)
O.g.f. as a continued fraction: 1/(1 - x*t/(1 - (x + 1)*t/(1 - 2*x*t/(1 - 2*(x + 1)*t/(1 - ...))))) = 1 + x*t + (x + 2*x^2)*t^2 + (x + 6*x^2 + 6*x^3)*t^3 + ... .
The row polynomials R(n,x), which begin R(1,x) = x, R(2,x) = x + 2*x^2, R(3,x) = x + 6*x^2 + 6*x^3, satisfy the recurrence x*d/dx ((x + 1)*R(n,x)) = R(n+1,x). It follows that the zeros of R(n,x) are real and negative (apply Corollary 1.2 of [Liu and Wang]).
Since this is the triangle of f-vectors of the (simplicial complexes dual to the) type A permutohedra, whose h-vectors form the Eulerian number triangle A008292, the coefficients of the polynomial (x-1)^n*R(n,1/(x-1)) give the n-th row of A008292. For example, from row 3 we have x^2 + 6*x + 6 = 1 + 4*y + y^2, where y = x + 1, producing [1,4,1] as the third row of A008292. The matrix product A008292 * A007318 gives the mirror image of this triangle (see A090582).
For n,k >= 0, T(n+1,k+1) = Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^(k-j)*binomial(k,j)*[(j+1)^(n+1) - j^(n+1)]. The matrix product of Pascal's triangle A007318 with the current array gives (essentially) A047969. This triangle is also related to triangle A047969 by means of the S-transform of [Hetyei], a linear transformation of polynomials whose value on the basis monomials x^k is given by S(x^k) = binomial(x,k). The S-transform of the shifted n-th row polynomial Q(n,x) := R(n,x)/x is S(Q(n,x)) = (x+1)^n - x^n. For example, from row 3 we obtain S(1 + 6*x + 6*x^2) = 1 + 6*x + 6*x*(x-1)/2 = 1 + 3*x + 3*x^2 = (x+1)^3 - x^3. For fixed k, the values S(Q(n,k)) give the nonzero entries in column (k-1) of the triangle A047969 (the Hilbert transform of the Eulerian numbers). (End)
E.g.f.: (exp(x)-1)^k = sum T(n,k)x^n/n!. - Vladimir Kruchinin, Aug 10 2010
T(n,k) = Sum_{i=1..k} A(n,i)*Binomial(n-i,k-i) where A(n,i) is the number of n-permutations that have i ascending runs, A008292.
From Tom Copeland, Oct 11 2011: (Start)
With e.g.f. A(x,t) = -1 + 1/(1+t*(1-exp(x))), the comp. inverse in x is B(x,t) = log(((1+t)/t) - 1/(t(1+x))).
With h(x,t) = 1/(dB/dx)= (1+x)((1+t)(1+x)-1), the row polynomial P(n,t) is given by (h(x,t)*d/dx)^n x, eval. at x=0, A=exp(x*h(y,t)*d/dy) y, eval. at y=0, and dA/dx = h(A(x,t),t), with P(0,t)=0.
(A factor of -1/n! was removed by Copeland on Aug 25 2016.) (End)
The term linear in x of [x*h(d/dx,t)]^n 1 gives the n-th row polynomial. (See A134685.) - Tom Copeland, Nov 07 2011
Row polynomials are given by D^n(1/(1-x*t)) evaluated at x = 0, where D is the operator (1+x)*d/dx. - Peter Bala, Nov 25 2011
T(n,x+y) = Sum_{j=0..n} binomial(n,j)*T(j,x)*T(n-j,y). - Dennis P. Walsh, Feb 24 2012
Let P be a Rota-Baxter operator of weight 1 satisfying the identity P(x)*P(y) = P(P(x)*y) + P(x*P(y)) + P(x*y). Then P(1)^2 = P(1) + 2*P^2(1). More generally, Guo shows that P(1)^n = Sum_{k=1..n} T(n,k)*P^k(1). - Peter Bala, Jun 08 2012
Sum_{i=1..n} (-1)^i*T(n,i)/i = 0, for n > 1. - Leonid Bedratyuk, Aug 09 2012
T(n, k) = Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^j*binomial(k, j)*(k-j)^n. [M. Catalani's re-indexed formula from Nov 28 2003] Proof: count the surjections of [n] onto [k] with the inclusion-exclusion principle, as an alternating sum of the number of functions from [n] to [k-j]. - Bert Seghers, Jun 29 2013
n-th row polynomial = 1/(1 + x)*( Sum_{k>=0} k^n*(x/(1 + x))^k ), valid for x in the open interval (-1/2, inf). See Tanny link. Cf. A145901. - Peter Bala, Jul 22 2014
T(n,k) = k * A141618(n,k-1) / binomial(n,k-1). - Tom Copeland, Oct 25 2014
Sum_{n>=0} n^k*a^n = Sum_{i=1..k} (a / (1 - a))^i * T(k, i)/(1-a) for |a| < 1. - David A. Corneth, Mar 09 2015
From Peter Bala, May 26 2015: (Start)
The row polynomials R(n,x) satisfy (1 + x)*R(n,x) = (-1)^n*x*R(n,-(1 + x)).
For a fixed integer k, the expansion of the function A(k,z) := exp( Sum_{n >= 1} R(n,k)*z^n/n ) has integer coefficients and satisfies the functional equation A(k,z)^(k + 1) = BINOMIAL(A(k,z))^k, where BINOMIAL(F(z))= 1/(1 - z)*F(z/(1 - z)) denotes the binomial transform of the o.g.f. F(z). Cf. A145901. For cases see A084784 (k = 1), A090352 (k = 2), A090355 (k = 3), A090357 (k = 4), A090362 (k = 5) and A084785 (k = -2 with z -> -z).
A(k,z)^(k + 1) = A(-(k + 1),-z)^k and hence BINOMIAL(A(k,z)) = A(-(k + 1),-z). (End)
From Tom Copeland, Oct 19 2016: (Start)
Let a(1) = 1 + x + B(1) = x + 1/2 and a(n) = B(n) = (B.)^n, where B(n) are the Bernoulli numbers defined by e^(B.t) = t / (e^t-1), then t / e^(a.t) = t / [(x + 1) * t + exp(B.t)] = (e^t - 1) /[ 1 + (x + 1) (e^t - 1)] = exp(p.(x)t), where (p.(x))^n = p_n(x) are the shifted, signed row polynomials of this array: p_0(x) = 0, p_1(x) = 1, p_2(x) = -(1 + 2 x), p_3(x) = 1 + 6 x + 6 x^2, ... and p_n(x) = n * b(n-1), where b(n) are the partition polynomials of A133314 evaluated with these a(n).
Sum_{n > 0} R(n,-1/2) x^n/n! = 2 * tanh(x/2), where R(n,x) = Sum_{k = 1..n} T(n,k) x^(k-1) are the shifted row polynomials of this entry, so R(n,-1/2) = 4 * (2^(n+1)-1) B(n+1)/(n+1). (Cf. A000182.)
(End)
Also the Bernoulli numbers are given by B(n) = Sum_{k =1..n} (-1)^k T(n,k) / (k+1). - Tom Copeland, Nov 06 2016
G.f. for column k: k! x^k / Product_{i=1..k} (1-i*x). - Robert A. Russell, Sep 25 2018
a(j) <= A183109(j). - Manfred Boergens, Jul 25 2021

A133314 Coefficients of list partition transform: reciprocal of an exponential generating function (e.g.f.).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, -1, -1, 2, -1, 6, -6, -1, 8, 6, -36, 24, -1, 10, 20, -60, -90, 240, -120, -1, 12, 30, -90, 20, -360, 480, -90, 1080, -1800, 720, -1, 14, 42, -126, 70, -630, 840, -420, -630, 5040, -4200, 2520, -12600, 15120, -5040, -1, 16, 56, -168, 112, -1008, 1344, 70
Offset: 0

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Author

Tom Copeland, Oct 18 2007, Oct 29 2007, Nov 16 2007

Keywords

Comments

The list partition transform of a sequence a(n) for which a(0)=1 is illustrated by:
b_0 = 1
b_1 = -a_1
b_2 = -a_2 + 2 a_1^2
b_3 = -a_3 + 6 a_2 a_1 - 6 a_1^3
b_4 = -a_4 + 8 a_3 a_1 + 6 a_2^2 - 36 a_2 a_1^2 + 24 a_1^4
... .
The unsigned coefficients are A049019 with a leading 1. The sign is dependent on the partition as evident from inspection (replace a_n's by -1).
Expressed umbrally, i.e., with the umbral operation (a.)^n := a_n,
exp(a.x) exp(b.x) = exp[(a.+b.)x] = 1; i.e., (a.+b.)^n = 1 for n=0 and 0 for all other values of n.
Expressed recursively,
b_0 = 1, b_n = -Sum_{j=1..n} binomial(n,j) a_j b_{n-j}; which is conditionally self-inverse, i.e., the roles of a_k and b_k may be reversed with a_0 = b_0 = 1.
Expressed in matrix form, b_n form the first column of B = matrix inverse of A .
A = Pascal matrix diagonally multiplied by a_n, i.e., A_{n,k} = binomial(n,k)* a_{n-k}.
Some examples of reciprocal pairs of sequences under these operations are:
1) A084358 and -A000262 with the first term set to 1.
2) (1,-1,0,0,...) and (0!,1!,2!,3!,...) with the unsigned associated matrices A128229 and A094587.
3) (1,-1,-1,-1,...) and A000670.
5) (1,-2,-2,0,0,0,...) and (0! c_1,1! c_2,2! c_3,3! c_4,...) where c_n = A000129(n) with the associated matrices A110327 and A110330.
6) (1,-2,2,0,0,0,...) and (1!,2!,3!,4!,...).
7) Sequences of rising and signed lowering factorials form reciprocal pairs where a_n = (-1)^n m!/(m-n)! and b_n = (m-1+n)!/(m-1)! for m=0,1,2,... .
Denote the action of the list partition transform on the sequence a. or an invertible matrix M by LPT(a.) = b. or LPT(M)= M^(-1).
If the matrix equation M = exp(T) also holds, then exp[a.*T]*exp[b.*T] = exp[(a.+b.)*T] = I, the identity matrix, because (a.+b.)^n = delta_n, the Kronecker delta with delta_n = 1 and delta_n = 0 otherwise, i.e., (0)^n = delta_n.
Therefore, [exp(a.*T)]^(-1) = exp[b.*T] = exp[LPT(a.)*T] = LPT[exp(a.*T)].
The fundamental Pascal (A007318), unsigned Lah (A105278) and associated Laguerre matrices can be generated by exponentiation of special infinitesimal matrices (see A132440, A132710 and A132681) such that finding LPT(a.) amounts to multiplying the k'th diagonal of the fundamental matrices by a_k for every diagonal followed by matrix inversion and then extraction of the b_n factors from the first column (simplest for the Pascal formulas above).
Conversely, the inverses of matrices formed by diagonally multiplying the three fundamental matrices by a_k are given by diagonally multiplying the fundamental matrices by b_k.
If LPT(M) is defined differently as application of the top formula to a_n = M^n, then b_n = (-M)^n and the formalism could even be applied to more general sequences of matrices M., providing the reciprocal of exp[t*M.].
The group of fundamental lower triangular matrices M = exp(T) such that LPT[exp(a.*T)] = exp[LPT(a.)*T] = [exp[a.*T]]^(-1) are obtained by infinitesimal generator matrices of the form T =
0;
t(0), 0;
0, t(1), 0;
0, 0, t(2), 0;
0, 0, 0, t(3), 0;
... .
T^m has trivially vanishing terms except along the m'th subdiagonal, which is a sequence of generalized factorials:
[ t(0)*t(1)...t(m-2)*t(m-1), t(1)*t(2)...t(m-1)*t(m), t(2)*t(3)...t(m)*t(m+1), ... ].
Therefore the principal submatrices of T (given by setting t(j) = 0 for j > n-1) are nilpotent with at least [Tsub_n]^(n+1) = 0.
The general group of matrices GM[a.] = exp[a.*T] can also be obtained through diagonal multiplication of M = exp(T) by the sequence a_n, as in the Pascal matrix example above and their inverses by diagonal multiplication by b. = LPT(a.).
Weighted-mappings interpretation for the top partition equation:
Given n pre-nodes (Pre) and k post-nodes (Post), each Pre is connected to only one Post and each Post has at least one Pre connected to it (surjections or onto functions/maps). Weight each Post by -a_m where m is the number of connections to the Post.
Weight each map by the product of the Post weights and multiply by the number of maps that share the same connectivity. Sum over the possible mappings for n Pre. The result is b_n.
E.g., b_3 = [ 3 Pre to 1 Post ] + [ 3 Pre to 2 Post ] + [ 3 Pre to 3 Post ]
= [1 map with 1 Post with 3 connections] + [ 6 maps with 1 Post with 2 connections and 1 Post with 1 connection] + [6 maps with 3 Post with 1 connection each]
= -a_3 + 6 * [-a_2*(-a_1)] + 6 * [-a_1*(-a_1)*(-a_1)].
See A263633 for the complementary formulation for the reciprocal of o.g.f.s rather than e.g.f.s and computations of these partition polynomials as Gram determinants. - Tom Copeland, Dec 04 2016
The coefficients of the partition polynomials enumerate the faces of the convex, bounded polytopes called permutohedra, and the absolute value of the sum of the coefficients gives the Euler characteristic of unity for each polytope; i.e., the absolute value of the sum of each row of the array is unity. In addition, the signs of the faces alternate with dimension, and the coefficients of faces with the same dimension for each polytope have the same sign. - Tom Copeland, Nov 13 2019
With the fundamental matrix chosen to be the lower triangular Pascal matrix M, the matrix MA whose n-th diagonals are multiplied by a_n (i.e., MA_{i,j} = PM_{i,j} * a_{i-j}) gives a matrix representation of the e.g.f. associated to the Appell polynomial sequence defined by e^{a.t}e^{xt}= e^{(a.+x)t} = e^{A.(x)t} where umbrally (A.(x))^n = A_n(x) = (a. + x)^n = sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k) a_k x^{n-k} are the associated Appell polynomials. Left multiplication of the column vector (1,x,x^2,..) by MA gives the Appell polynomial sequence, and multiplication of the two e.g.f.s e^{a.t} and e^{b.t} corresponds to multiplication of their respective matrix representations MA and MB. Forming the reciprocal of an e.g.f. corresponds to taking the matrix inverse of its matrix representation as noted above. A263634 gives an associated modified Pascal matrix representation of the raising operator for the Appell sequence. - Tom Copeland, Nov 13 2019
The diagonal of MA consists of all ones. Let MAN be the truncated square submatrix of MA containing the coefficients of the first N Appell polynomials A_k=(a.+x)^k = Sum(j=0 to k) MAN(k,j) x^j. Then by the Cayley-Hamilton theorem (I-MAN)^N = 0; therefore, MAN^(-1) = Sum(k=1 to N) binomial(N,k) (-MAN)^{k-1} = MBN, the inverse of MAN, containing the coefficients of the first N rows of the Appell polynomials B_k(x) = (b. + x)^k = Sum(j=0 to k) MBN(k,j) x^j, which are the umbral compositional inverses of the Appell row polynomials A_k(x) of MAN; that is, A_k(B.(x)) = x^k = B_k(A.(x)), where, e.g., (A.(x))^k = A_k(x). - Tom Copeland, May 13 2020
The use of the term 'list partition transform' resulted from one of my first uses of these partition polynomials in relating A000262 to A084358 with their simple e.g.f.s. Other appropriate names would be the permutohedra polynomials since they are refined Euler characteristics of the permutohedra or the reciprocal polynomials since they give the multiplicative inverses of e.g.f.s with a constant of 1. - Tom Copeland, Oct 09 2022

Examples

			Table starts:
[0] [ 1]
[1] [-1]
[2] [-1,  2]
[3] [-1,  6, -6]
[4] [-1,  8,  6, -36,  24]
[5] [-1, 10, 20, -60, -90,  240, -120]
[6] [-1, 12, 30, -90,  20, -360,  480, -90, 1080, -1800, 720]
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    b[0] = 1; b[n_] := b[n] = -Sum[Binomial[n, j]*a[j]*b[n-j], {j, 1, n}];
    row[0] = {1}; row[n_] := Coefficient[b[n], #]& /@ (Times @@ (a /@ #)&) /@ IntegerPartitions[n];
    Table[row[n], {n, 0, 8}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Apr 23 2014 *)
  • Sage
    def A133314_row(n): return [(-1)^len(s)*factorial(len(s))*SetPartitions(sum(s), s).cardinality() for s in Partitions(n)]
    for n in (0..10): print(A133314_row(n)) # Peter Luschny, Sep 18 2015

Formula

b_{n-1} = (1/n)(d/da(1))p_n[a_1, a_2, ..., a_n] where p_n are the row partition polynomials of the cumulant generator A127671. - Tom Copeland, Oct 13 2012
(E.g.f. of matrix B) = (e.g.f. of b)·exp(xt) = exp(b.t)·exp(xt) = exp(xt)/exp(a.t) = (e.g.f. of A^(-1)) and (e.g.f. of matrix A) = exp(a.t)·exp(xt) = exp(xt)/exp(b.t) = (e.g.f. of B^(-1)), where the umbral evaluation of exp(b.t) = Sum{n >= 0} (b.t)^n / n! = Sum_{n >= 0} b_n t^n / n! is understood in the denominator. These e.g.f.s define Appell sequences of polynomials. - Tom Copeland, Mar 22 2014
Sum of the n-th row is (-1)^n. - Peter Luschny, Sep 18 2015
The unsigned coefficients for the partitions a_2*a_1^n for n >= 0 are the Lah numbers A001286. - Tom Copeland, Aug 06 2016
G.f.: 1 / (1 + Sum_{n > 0} a_n x^n/n!) = 1 / exp(a.x). - Tom Copeland, Oct 18 2016
Let a_1 = 1 + x + B_1 = x + 1/2 and a_n = B_n = (B.)^n, where B_n are the Bernoulli numbers defined by e^(B.t) = t / (e^t-1), then t / e^(a.t) = t / [(x + 1) * t + exp(B.t)] = (e^t - 1) /[ 1 + (x + 1) (e^t - 1)] = exp(p.(x)t), where (p.(x))^n = p_n(x) are the shifted signed polynomials of A019538: p_0(x) = 0, p_1(x) = 1, p_2(x) = -(1 + 2 x), p_3(x) = 1 + 6 x + 6 x^2, ... , p_n(x) = n * b_{n-1}. - Tom Copeland, Oct 18 2016
With a_n = 1/(n+1), b_n = B_n, the Bernoulli numbers. - Tom Copeland, Nov 08 2016
Indeterminate substitutions as illustrated in A356145 lead to [E] = [L][P] = [P][E]^(-1)[P] = [P][RT] and [E]^(-1) = [P][L] = [P][E][P] = [RT][P], where [E] contains the refined Eulerian partition polynomials of A145271; [E]^(-1), A356145, the inverse set to [E]; [P], the permutohedra polynomials of this entry; [L], the classic Lagrange inversion polynomials of A134685; and [RT], the reciprocal tangent polynomials of A356144. Since [L]^2 = [P]^2 = [RT]^2 = [I], the substitutional identity, [L] = [E][P] = [P][E]^(-1) = [RT][P], [RT] = [E]^(-1)[P] = [P][L][P] = [P][E], and [P] = [L][E] = [E][RT] = [E]^(-1)[L] = [RT][E]^(-1). - Tom Copeland, Oct 05 2022

Extensions

More terms from Jean-François Alcover, Apr 23 2014

A028246 Triangular array a(n,k) = (1/k)*Sum_{i=0..k} (-1)^(k-i)*binomial(k,i)*i^n; n >= 1, 1 <= k <= n, read by rows.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 3, 2, 1, 7, 12, 6, 1, 15, 50, 60, 24, 1, 31, 180, 390, 360, 120, 1, 63, 602, 2100, 3360, 2520, 720, 1, 127, 1932, 10206, 25200, 31920, 20160, 5040, 1, 255, 6050, 46620, 166824, 317520, 332640, 181440, 40320, 1, 511, 18660, 204630, 1020600, 2739240, 4233600, 3780000, 1814400, 362880
Offset: 1

Views

Author

N. J. A. Sloane, Doug McKenzie (mckfam4(AT)aol.com)

Keywords

Comments

Let M = n X n matrix with (i,j)-th entry a(n+1-j, n+1-i), e.g., if n = 3, M = [1 1 1; 3 1 0; 2 0 0]. Given a sequence s = [s(0)..s(n-1)], let b = [b(0)..b(n-1)] be its inverse binomial transform and let c = [c(0)..c(n-1)] = M^(-1)*transpose(b). Then s(k) = Sum_{i=0..n-1} b(i)*binomial(k,i) = Sum_{i=0..n-1} c(i)*k^i, k=0..n-1. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 11 2001
From Gary W. Adamson, Aug 09 2008: (Start)
Julius Worpitzky's 1883 algorithm generates Bernoulli numbers.
By way of example [Wikipedia]:
B0 = 1;
B1 = 1/1 - 1/2;
B2 = 1/1 - 3/2 + 2/3;
B3 = 1/1 - 7/2 + 12/3 - 6/4;
B4 = 1/1 - 15/2 + 50/3 - 60/4 + 24/5;
B5 = 1/1 - 31/2 + 180/3 - 390/4 + 360/5 - 120/6;
B6 = 1/1 - 63/2 + 602/3 - 2100/4 + 3360/5 - 2520/6 + 720/7;
...
Note that in this algorithm, odd n's for the Bernoulli numbers sum to 0, not 1, and the sum for B1 = 1/2 = (1/1 - 1/2). B3 = 0 = (1 - 7/2 + 13/3 - 6/4) = 0. The summation for B4 = -1/30. (End)
Pursuant to Worpitzky's algorithm and given M = A028246 as an infinite lower triangular matrix, M * [1/1, -1/2, 1/3, ...] (i.e., the Harmonic series with alternate signs) = the Bernoulli numbers starting [1/1, 1/2, 1/6, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Mar 22 2012
From Tom Copeland, Oct 23 2008: (Start)
G(x,t) = 1/(1 + (1-exp(x*t))/t) = 1 + 1 x + (2 + t)*x^2/2! + (6 + 6t + t^2)*x^3/3! + ... gives row polynomials for A090582, the f-polynomials for the permutohedra (see A019538).
G(x,t-1) = 1 + 1*x + (1 + t)*x^2 / 2! + (1 + 4t + t^2)*x^3 / 3! + ... gives row polynomials for A008292, the h-polynomials for permutohedra.
G[(t+1)x,-1/(t+1)] = 1 + (1+ t) x + (1 + 3t + 2 t^2) x^2 / 2! + ... gives row polynomials for the present triangle. (End)
The Worpitzky triangle seems to be an apt name for this triangle. - Johannes W. Meijer, Jun 18 2009
If Pascal's triangle is written as a lower triangular matrix and multiplied by A028246 written as an upper triangular matrix, the product is a matrix where the (i,j)-th term is (i+1)^j. For example,
1,0,0,0 1,1,1, 1 1,1, 1, 1
1,1,0,0 * 0,1,3, 7 = 1,2, 4, 8
1,2,1,0 0,0,2,12 1,3, 9,27
1,3,3,1 0,0,0, 6 1,4,16,64
So, numbering all three matrices' rows and columns starting at 0, the (i,j) term of the product is (i+1)^j. - Jack A. Cohen (ProfCohen(AT)comcast.net), Aug 03 2010
The Fi1 and Fi2 triangle sums are both given by sequence A000670. For the definition of these triangle sums see A180662. The mirror image of the Worpitzky triangle is A130850. - Johannes W. Meijer, Apr 20 2011
Let S_n(m) = 1^m + 2^m + ... + n^m. Then, for n >= 0, we have the following representation of S_n(m) as a linear combination of the binomial coefficients:
S_n(m) = Sum_{i=1..n+1} a(i+n*(n+1)/2)*C(m,i). E.g., S_2(m) = a(4)*C(m,1) + a(5)*C(m,2) + a(6)*C(m,3) = C(m,1) + 3*C(m,2) + 2*C(m,3). - Vladimir Shevelev, Dec 21 2011
Given the set X = [1..n] and 1 <= k <= n, then a(n,k) is the number of sets T of size k of subset S of X such that S is either empty or else contains 1 and another element of X and such that any two elemements of T are either comparable or disjoint. - Michael Somos, Apr 20 2013
Working with the row and column indexing starting at -1, a(n,k) gives the number of k-dimensional faces in the first barycentric subdivision of the standard n-dimensional simplex (apply Brenti and Welker, Lemma 2.1). For example, the barycentric subdivision of the 2-simplex (a triangle) has 1 empty face, 7 vertices, 12 edges and 6 triangular faces giving row 4 of this triangle as (1,7,12,6). Cf. A053440. - Peter Bala, Jul 14 2014
See A074909 and above g.f.s for associations among this array and the Bernoulli polynomials and their umbral compositional inverses. - Tom Copeland, Nov 14 2014
An e.g.f. G(x,t) = exp[P(.,t)x] = 1/t - 1/[t+(1-t)(1-e^(-xt^2))] = (1-t) * x + (-2t + 3t^2 - t^3) * x^2/2! + (6t^2 - 12t^3 + 7t^4 - t^5) * x^3/3! + ... for the shifted, reverse, signed polynomials with the first element nulled, is generated by the infinitesimal generator g(u,t)d/du = [(1-u*t)(1-(1+u)t)]d/du, i.e., exp[x * g(u,t)d/du] u eval. at u=0 generates the polynomials. See A019538 and the G. Rzadkowski link below for connections to the Bernoulli and Eulerian numbers, a Ricatti differential equation, and a soliton solution to the KdV equation. The inverse in x of this e.g.f. is Ginv(x,t) = (-1/t^2)*log{[1-t(1+x)]/[(1-t)(1-tx)]} = [1/(1-t)]x + [(2t-t^2)/(1-t)^2]x^2/2 + [(3t^2-3t^3+t^4)/(1-t)^3]x^3/3 + [(4t^3-6t^4+4t^5-t^6)/(1-t)^4]x^4/4 + ... . The numerators are signed, shifted A135278 (reversed A074909), and the rational functions are the columns of A074909. Also, dG(x,t)/dx = g(G(x,t),t) (cf. A145271). (Analytic G(x,t) added, and Ginv corrected and expanded on Dec 28 2015.) - Tom Copeland, Nov 21 2014
The operator R = x + (1 + t) + t e^{-D} / [1 + t(1-e^(-D))] = x + (1+t) + t - (t+t^2) D + (t+3t^2+2t^3) D^2/2! - ... contains an e.g.f. of the reverse row polynomials of the present triangle, i.e., A123125 * A007318 (with row and column offset 1 and 1). Umbrally, R^n 1 = q_n(x;t) = (q.(0;t)+x)^n, with q_m(0;t) = (t+1)^(m+1) - t^(m+1), the row polynomials of A074909, and D = d/dx. In other words, R generates the Appell polynomials associated with the base sequence A074909. For example, R 1 = q_1(x;t) = (q.(0;t)+x) = q_1(0;t) + q__0(0;t)x = (1+2t) + x, and R^2 1 = q_2(x;t) = (q.(0;t)+x)^2 = q_2(0:t) + 2q_1(0;t)x + q_0(0;t)x^2 = 1+3t+3t^2 + 2(1+2t)x + x^2. Evaluating the polynomials at x=0 regenerates the base sequence. With a simple sign change in R, R generates the Appell polynomials associated with A248727. - Tom Copeland, Jan 23 2015
For a natural refinement of this array, see A263634. - Tom Copeland, Nov 06 2015
From Wolfdieter Lang, Mar 13 2017: (Start)
The e.g.f. E(n, x) for {S(n, m)}{m>=0} with S(n, m) = Sum{k=1..m} k^n, n >= 0, (with undefined sum put to 0) is exp(x)*R(n+1, x) with the exponential row polynomials R(n, x) = Sum_{k=1..n} a(n, k)*x^k/k!. E.g., e.g.f. for n = 2, A000330: exp(x)*(1*x/1!+3*x^2/2!+2*x^3/3!).
The o.g.f. G(n, x) for {S(n, m)}{m >=0} is then found by Laplace transform to be G(n, 1/p) = p*Sum{k=1..n} a(n+1, k)/(p-1)^(2+k).
Hence G(n, x) = x/(1 - x)^(n+2)*Sum_{k=1..n} A008292(n,k)*x^(k-1).
E.g., n=2: G(2, 1/p) = p*(1/(p-1)^2 + 3/(p-1)^3 + 2/(p-1)^4) = p^2*(1+p)/(p-1)^4; hence G(2, x) = x*(1+x)/(1-x)^4.
This works also backwards: from the o.g.f. to the e.g.f. of {S(n, m)}_{m>=0}. (End)
a(n,k) is the number of k-tuples of pairwise disjoint and nonempty subsets of a set of size n. - Dorian Guyot, May 21 2019
From Rajesh Kumar Mohapatra, Mar 16 2020: (Start)
a(n-1,k) is the number of chains of length k in a partially ordered set formed from subsets of an n-element set ordered by inclusion such that the first term of the chains is either the empty set or an n-element set.
Also, a(n-1,k) is the number of distinct k-level rooted fuzzy subsets of an n-set ordered by set inclusion. (End)
The relations on p. 34 of Hasan (also p. 17 of Franco and Hasan) agree with the relation between A019538 and this entry given in the formula section. - Tom Copeland, May 14 2020
T(n,k) is the size of the Green's L-classes in the D-classes of rank (k-1) in the semigroup of partial transformations on an (n-1)-set. - Geoffrey Critzer, Jan 09 2023
T(n,k) is the number of strongly connected binary relations on [n] that have period k (A367948) and index 1. See Theorem 5.4.25(6) in Ki Hang Kim reference. - Geoffrey Critzer, Dec 07 2023

Examples

			The triangle a(n, k) starts:
n\k 1   2    3     4      5      6      7      8     9
1:  1
2:  1   1
3:  1   3    2
4:  1   7   12     6
5:  1  15   50    60     24
6:  1  31  180   390    360    120
7:  1  63  602  2100   3360   2520    720
8:  1 127 1932 10206  25200  31920  20160   5040
9:  1 255 6050 46620 166824 317520 332640 181440 40320
... [Reformatted by _Wolfdieter Lang_, Mar 26 2015]
-----------------------------------------------------
Row 5 of triangle is {1,15,50,60,24}, which is {1,15,25,10,1} times {0!,1!,2!,3!,4!}.
From _Vladimir Shevelev_, Dec 22 2011: (Start)
Also, for power sums, we have
S_0(n) = C(n,1);
S_1(n) = C(n,1) +    C(n,2);
S_2(n) = C(n,1) +  3*C(n,2) +  2*C(n,3);
S_3(n) = C(n,1) +  7*C(n,2) + 12*C(n,3) +  6*C(n,4);
S_4(n) = C(n,1) + 15*C(n,2) + 50*C(n,3) + 60*C(n,4) + 24*C(n,5); etc.
(End)
For X = [1,2,3], the sets T are {{}}, {{},{1,2}}, {{},{1,3}}, {{},{1,2,3}}, {{},{1,2},{1,2,3}}, {{},{1,3},{1,2,3}} and so a(3,1)=1, a(3,2)=3, a(3,3)=2. - _Michael Somos_, Apr 20 2013
		

References

  • Ki Hang Kim, Boolean Matrix Theory and Applications, Marcel Dekker, New York and Basel (1982).

Crossrefs

Dropping the column of 1's gives A053440.
Without the k in the denominator (in the definition), we get A019538. See also the Stirling number triangle A008277.
Row sums give A000629(n-1) for n >= 1.
Cf. A027642, A002445. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 09 2008
Appears in A161739 (RSEG2 triangle), A161742 and A161743. - Johannes W. Meijer, Jun 18 2009
Binomial transform is A038719. Cf. A131689.
Cf. A119879.
From Rajesh Kumar Mohapatra, Mar 29 2020: (Start)
A000007(n-1) (column k=1), A000225(n-1) (column k=2), A028243(n-1) (column k=3), A028244(n-1) (column k=4), A028245(n-1) (column k=5), for n > 0.
Diagonal gives A000142(n-1), for n >=1.
Next-to-last diagonal gives A001710,
Third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh external diagonal respectively give A005460, A005461, A005462, A005463, A005464. (End)

Programs

  • GAP
    Flat(List([1..10], n-> List([1..n], k-> Stirling2(n,k)* Factorial(k-1) ))); # G. C. Greubel, May 30 2019
    
  • Magma
    [[StirlingSecond(n,k)*Factorial(k-1): k in [1..n]]: n in [1..10]]; // G. C. Greubel, May 30 2019
    
  • Maple
    a := (n,k) -> add((-1)^(k-i)*binomial(k,i)*i^n, i=0..k)/k;
    seq(print(seq(a(n,k),k=1..n)),n=1..10);
    T := (n,k) -> add(eulerian1(n,j)*binomial(n-j,n-k), j=0..n):
    seq(print(seq(T(n,k),k=0..n)),n=0..9); # Peter Luschny, Jul 12 2013
  • Mathematica
    a[n_, k_] = Sum[(-1)^(k-i) Binomial[k,i]*i^n, {i,0,k}]/k; Flatten[Table[a[n, k], {n, 10}, {k, n}]] (* Jean-François Alcover, May 02 2011 *)
  • PARI
    {T(n, k) = if( k<0 || k>n, 0, n! * polcoeff( (x / log(1 + x + x^2 * O(x^n) ))^(n+1), n-k))}; /* Michael Somos, Oct 02 2002 */
    
  • PARI
    {T(n,k) = stirling(n,k,2)*(k-1)!}; \\ G. C. Greubel, May 31 2019
    
  • Python
    # Assuming offset (n, k) = (0, 0).
    def T(n, k):
        if k >  n: return 0
        if k == 0: return 1
        return k*T(n - 1, k - 1) + (k + 1)*T(n - 1, k)
    for n in range(9):
        print([T(n, k) for k in range(n + 1)])  # Peter Luschny, Apr 26 2022
  • Sage
    def A163626_row(n) :
        x = polygen(ZZ,'x')
        A = []
        for m in range(0, n, 1) :
            A.append((-x)^m)
            for j in range(m, 0, -1):
                A[j - 1] = j * (A[j - 1] - A[j])
        return list(A[0])
    for i in (1..7) : print(A163626_row(i))  # Peter Luschny, Jan 25 2012
    
  • Sage
    [[stirling_number2(n,k)*factorial(k-1) for k in (1..n)] for n in (1..10)] # G. C. Greubel, May 30 2019
    

Formula

E.g.f.: -log(1-y*(exp(x)-1)). - Vladeta Jovovic, Sep 28 2003
a(n, k) = S2(n, k)*(k-1)! where S2(n, k) is a Stirling number of the second kind (cf. A008277). Also a(n,k) = T(n,k)/k, where T(n, k) = A019538.
Essentially same triangle as triangle [1, 0, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0, 5, 0, 6, 0, 7, ...] DELTA [1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, ...] where DELTA is Deléham's operator defined in A084938, but the notation is different.
Sum of terms in n-th row = A000629(n) - Gary W. Adamson, May 30 2005
The row generating polynomials P(n, t) are given by P(1, t)=t, P(n+1, t) = t(t+1)(d/dt)P(n, t) for n >= 1 (see the Riskin and Beckwith reference). - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 09 2005
From Gottfried Helms, Jul 12 2006: (Start)
Delta-matrix as can be read from H. Hasse's proof of a connection between the zeta-function and Bernoulli numbers (see link below).
Let P = lower triangular matrix with entries P[row,col] = binomial(row,col).
Let J = unit matrix with alternating signs J[r,r]=(-1)^r.
Let N(m) = column matrix with N(m)(r) = (r+1)^m, N(1)--> natural numbers.
Let V = Vandermonde matrix with V[r,c] = (r+1)^c.
V is then also N(0)||N(1)||N(2)||N(3)... (indices r,c always beginning at 0).
Then Delta = P*J * V and B' = N(-1)' * Delta, where B is the column matrix of Bernoulli numbers and ' means transpose, or for the single k-th Bernoulli number B_k with the appropriate column of Delta,
B_k = N(-1)' * Delta[ *,k ] = N(-1)' * P*J * N(k).
Using a single column instead of V and assuming infinite dimension, H. Hasse showed that in x = N(-1) * P*J * N(s), where s can be any complex number and s*zeta(1-s) = x.
His theorem reads: s*zeta(1-s) = Sum_{n>=0..inf} (n+1)^-1*delta(n,s), where delta(n,s) = Sum_{j=0..n} (-1)^j * binomial(n,j) * (j+1)^s.
(End)
a(n,k) = k*a(n-1,k) + (k-1)*a(n-1,k-1) with a(n,1) = 1 and a(n,n) = (n-1)!. - Johannes W. Meijer, Jun 18 2009
Rephrasing the Meijer recurrence above: Let M be the (n+1)X(n+1) bidiagonal matrix with M(r,r) = M(r,r+1) = r, r >= 1, in the two diagonals and the rest zeros. The row a(n+1,.) of the triangle is row 1 of M^n. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 24 2011
From Tom Copeland, Oct 11 2011: (Start)
With e.g.f.. A(x,t) = G[(t+1)x,-1/(t+1)]-1 (from 2008 comment) = -1 + 1/[1-(1+t)(1-e^(-x))] = (1+t)x + (1+3t+2t^2)x^2/2! + ..., the comp. inverse in x is
B(x,t)= -log(t/(1+t)+1/((1+t)(1+x))) = (1/(1+t))x - ((1+2t)/(1+t)^2)x^2/2 + ((1+3t+3t^2)/(1+t)^3)x^3/3 + .... The numerators are the row polynomials of A074909, and the rational functions are (omitting the initial constants) signed columns of the re-indexed Pascal triangle A007318.
Let h(x,t)= 1/(dB/dx) = (1+x)(1+t(1+x)), then the row polynomial P(n,t) = (1/n!)(h(x,t)*d/dx)^n x, evaluated at x=0, A=exp(x*h(y,t)*d/dy) y, eval. at y=0, and dA/dx = h(A(x,t),t), with P(1,t)=1+t. (Series added Dec 29 2015.)(End)
Let denote the Eulerian numbers A173018(n,k), then T(n,k) = Sum_{j=0..n} *binomial(n-j,n-k). - Peter Luschny, Jul 12 2013
Matrix product A007318 * A131689. The n-th row polynomial R(n,x) = Sum_{k >= 1} k^(n-1)*(x/(1 + x))^k, valid for x in the open interval (-1/2, inf). Cf A038719. R(n,-1/2) = (-1)^(n-1)*(2^n - 1)*Bernoulli(n)/n. - Peter Bala, Jul 14 2014
a(n,k) = A141618(n,k) / C(n,k-1). - Tom Copeland, Oct 25 2014
For the row polynomials, A028246(n,x) = A019538(n-1,x) * (1+x). - Tom Copeland, Dec 28 2015
n-th row polynomial R(n,x) = (1+x) o (1+x) o ... o (1+x) (n factors), where o denotes the black diamond multiplication operator of Dukes and White. See example E11 in the Bala link. - Peter Bala, Jan 12 2018
From Dorian Guyot, May 21 2019: (Start)
Sum_{i=0..k} binomial(k,i) * a(n,i) = (k+1)^n.
Sum_{k=0..n} a(n,k) = 2*A000670(n).
(End)
With all offsets 0, let A_n(x;y) = (y + E.(x))^n, an Appell sequence in y where E.(x)^k = E_k(x) are the Eulerian polynomials of A123125. Then the row polynomials of this entry, A028246, are given by x^n * A_n(1 + 1/x;0). Other specializations of A_n(x;y) give A046802, A090582, A119879, A130850, and A248727. - Tom Copeland, Jan 24 2020
The row generating polynomials R(n,x) = Sum_{i=1..n} a(n,i) * x^i satisfy the recurrence equation R(n+1,x) = R(n,x) + Sum_{k=0..n-1} binomial(n-1,k) * R(k+1,x) * R(n-k,x) for n >= 1 with initial value R(1,x) = x. - Werner Schulte, Jun 17 2021

Extensions

Definition corrected by Li Guo, Dec 16 2006
Typo in link corrected by Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 17 2009
Error in title corrected by Johannes W. Meijer, Sep 24 2010
Edited by M. F. Hasler, Oct 29 2014

A074909 Running sum of Pascal's triangle (A007318), or beheaded Pascal's triangle read by beheaded rows.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 3, 3, 1, 4, 6, 4, 1, 5, 10, 10, 5, 1, 6, 15, 20, 15, 6, 1, 7, 21, 35, 35, 21, 7, 1, 8, 28, 56, 70, 56, 28, 8, 1, 9, 36, 84, 126, 126, 84, 36, 9, 1, 10, 45, 120, 210, 252, 210, 120, 45, 10, 1, 11, 55, 165, 330, 462, 462, 330, 165, 55, 11
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Wouter Meeussen, Oct 01 2002

Keywords

Comments

This sequence counts the "almost triangular" partitions of n. A partition is triangular if it is of the form 0+1+2+...+k. Examples: 3=0+1+2, 6=0+1+2+3. An "almost triangular" partition is a triangular partition with at most 1 added to each of the parts. Examples: 7 = 1+1+2+3 = 0+2+2+3 = 0+1+3+3 = 0+1+2+4. Thus a(7)=4. 8 = 1+2+2+3 = 1+1+3+3 = 1+1+2+4 = 0+2+3+3 = 0+2+2+4 = 0+1+3+4 so a(8)=6. - Moshe Shmuel Newman, Dec 19 2002
The "almost triangular" partitions are the ones cycled by the operation of "Bulgarian solitaire", as defined by Martin Gardner.
Start with A007318 - I (I = Identity matrix), then delete right border of zeros. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 15 2007
Also the number of increasing acyclic functions from {1..n-k+1} to {1..n+2}. A function f is acyclic if for every subset B of the domain the image of B under f does not equal B. For example, T(3,1)=4 since there are exactly 4 increasing acyclic functions from {1,2,3} to {1,2,3,4,5}: f1={(1,2),(2,3),(3,4)}, f2={(1,2),(2,3),(3,5)}, f3={(1,2),(2,4),(3,5)} and f4={(1,3),(2,4),(4,5)}. - Dennis P. Walsh, Mar 14 2008
Second Bernoulli polynomials are (from A164555 instead of A027641) B2(n,x) = 1; 1/2, 1; 1/6, 1, 1; 0, 1/2, 3/2, 1; -1/30, 0, 1, 2, 1; 0, -1/6, 0, 5/3, 5/2, 1; ... . Then (B2(n,x)/A002260) = 1; 1/2, 1/2; 1/6, 1/2, 1/3; 0, 1/4, 1/2, 1/4; -1/30, 0, 1/3, 1/2, 1/5; 0, -1/12, 0, 5/12, 1/2, 1/6; ... . See (from Faulhaber 1631) Jacob Bernoulli Summae Potestatum (sum of powers) in A159688. Inverse polynomials are 1; -1, 2; 1, -3, 3; -1, 4, -6, 4; ... = A074909 with negative even diagonals. Reflected A053382/A053383 = reflected B(n,x) = RB(n,x) = 1; -1/2, 1; 1/6, -1, 1; 0, 1/2, -3/2, 1; ... . A074909 is inverse of RB(n,x)/A002260 = 1; -1/2, 1/2; 1/6, -1/2, 1/3; 0, 1/4, -1/2, 1/4; ... . - Paul Curtz, Jun 21 2010
A054143 is the fission of the polynomial sequence (p(n,x)) given by p(n,x) = x^n + x^(n-1) + ... + x + 1 by the polynomial sequence ((x+1)^n). See A193842 for the definition of fission. - Clark Kimberling, Aug 07 2011
Reversal of A135278. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 11 2012
For a closed-form formula for arbitrary left and right borders of Pascal-like triangles see A228196. - Boris Putievskiy, Aug 19 2013
For a closed-form formula for generalized Pascal's triangle see A228576. - Boris Putievskiy, Sep 09 2013
From A238363, the operator equation d/d(:xD:)f(xD)={exp[d/d(xD)]-1}f(xD) = f(xD+1)-f(xD) follows. Choosing f(x) = x^n and using :xD:^n/n! = binomial(xD,n) and (xD)^n = Bell(n,:xD:), the Bell polynomials of A008277, it follows that the lower triangular matrix [padded A074909]
A) = [St2]*[dP]*[St1] = A048993*A132440*[padded A008275]
B) = [St2]*[dP]*[St2]^(-1)
C) = [St1]^(-1)*[dP]*[St1],
where [St1]=padded A008275 just as [St2]=A048993=padded A008277 whereas [padded A074909]=A007318-I with I=identity matrix. - Tom Copeland, Apr 25 2014
T(n,k) generated by m-gon expansions in the case of odd m with "vertex to side" version or even m with "vertex to vertes" version. Refer to triangle expansions in A061777 and A101946 (and their companions for m-gons) which are "vertex to vertex" and "vertex to side" versions respectively. The label values at each iteration can be arranged as a triangle. Any m-gon can also be arranged as the same triangle with conditions: (i) m is odd and expansion is "vertex to side" version or (ii) m is even and expansion is "vertex to vertex" version. m*Sum_{i=1..k} T(n,k) gives the total label value at the n-th iteration. See also A247976. Vertex to vertex: A061777, A247618, A247619, A247620. Vertex to side: A101946, A247903, A247904, A247905. - Kival Ngaokrajang Sep 28 2014
From Tom Copeland, Nov 12 2014: (Start)
With P(n,x) = [(x+1)^(n+1)-x^(n+1)], the row polynomials of this entry, Up(n,x) = P(n,x)/(n+1) form an Appell sequence of polynomials that are the umbral compositional inverses of the Bernoulli polynomials B(n,x), i.e., B[n,Up(.,x)] = x^n = Up[n,B(.,x)] under umbral substitution, e.g., B(.,x)^n = B(n,x).
The e.g.f. for the Bernoulli polynomials is [t/(e^t - 1)] e^(x*t), and for Up(n,x) it's exp[Up(.,x)t] = [(e^t - 1)/t] e^(x*t).
Another g.f. is G(t,x) = log[(1-x*t)/(1-(1+x)*t)] = log[1 + t /(1 + -(1+x)t)] = t/(1-t*Up(.,x)) = Up(0,x)*t + Up(1,x)*t^2 + Up(2,x)*t^3 + ... = t + (1+2x)/2 t^2 + (1+3x+3x^2)/3 t^3 + (1+4x+6x^2+4x^3)/4 t^4 + ... = -log(1-t*P(.,x)), expressed umbrally.
The inverse, Ginv(t,x), in t of the g.f. may be found in A008292 from Copeland's list of formulas (Sep 2014) with a=(1+x) and b=x. This relates these two sets of polynomials to algebraic geometry, e.g., elliptic curves, trigonometric expansions, Chebyshev polynomials, and the combinatorics of permutahedra and their duals.
Ginv(t,x) = [e^((1+x)t) - e^(xt)] / [(1+x) * e^((1+x)t) - x * e^(xt)] = [e^(t/2) - e^(-t/2)] / [(1+x)e^(t/2) - x*e^(-t/2)] = (e^t - 1) / [1 + (1+x) (e^t - 1)] = t - (1 + 2 x) t^2/2! + (1 + 6 x + 6 x^2) t^3/3! - (1 + 14 x + 36 x^2 + 24 x^3) t^4/4! + ... = -exp[-Perm(.,x)t], where Perm(n,x) are the reverse face polynomials, or reverse f-vectors, for the permutahedra, i.e., the face polynomials for the duals of the permutahedra. Cf. A090582, A019538, A049019, A133314, A135278.
With L(t,x) = t/(1+t*x) with inverse L(t,-x) in t, and Cinv(t) = e^t - 1 with inverse C(t) = log(1 + t). Then Ginv(t,x) = L[Cinv(t),(1+x)] and G(t,x) = C[L[t,-(1+x)]]. Note L is the special linear fractional (Mobius) transformation.
Connections among the combinatorics of the permutahedra, simplices (cf. A135278), and the associahedra can be made through the Lagrange inversion formula (LIF) of A133437 applied to G(t,x) (cf. A111785 and the Schroeder paths A126216 also), and similarly for the LIF A134685 applied to Ginv(t,x) involving the simplicial Whitehouse complex, phylogenetic trees, and other structures. (See also the LIFs A145271 and A133932). (End)
R = x - exp[-[B(n+1)/(n+1)]D] = x - exp[zeta(-n)D] is the raising operator for this normalized sequence UP(n,x) = P(n,x) / (n+1), that is, R UP(n,x) = UP(n+1,x), where D = d/dx, zeta(-n) is the value of the Riemann zeta function evaluated at -n, and B(n) is the n-th Bernoulli number, or constant B(n,0) of the Bernoulli polynomials. The raising operator for the Bernoulli polynomials is then x + exp[-[B(n+1)/(n+1)]D]. [Note added Nov 25 2014: exp[zeta(-n)D] is abbreviation of exp(a.D) with (a.)^n = a_n = zeta(-n)]. - Tom Copeland, Nov 17 2014
The diagonals T(n, n-m), for n >= m, give the m-th iterated partial sum of the positive integers; that is A000027(n+1), A000217(n), A000292(n-1), A000332(n+1), A000389(n+1), A000579(n+1), A000580(n+1), A000581(n+1), A000582(n+1), ... . - Wolfdieter Lang, May 21 2015
The transpose gives the numerical coefficients of the Maurer-Cartan form matrix for the general linear group GL(n,1) (cf. Olver, but note that the formula at the bottom of p. 6 has an error--the 12 should be a 15). - Tom Copeland, Nov 05 2015
The left invariant Maurer-Cartan form polynomial on p. 7 of the Olver paper for the group GL^n(1) is essentially a binomial convolution of the row polynomials of this entry with those of A133314, or equivalently the row polynomials generated by the product of the e.g.f. of this entry with that of A133314, with some reindexing. - Tom Copeland, Jul 03 2018
From Tom Copeland, Jul 10 2018: (Start)
The first column of the inverse matrix is the sequence of Bernoulli numbers, which follows from the umbral definition of the Bernoulli polynomials (B.(0) + x)^n = B_n(x) evaluated at x = 1 and the relation B_n(0) = B_n(1) for n > 1 and -B_1(0) = 1/2 = B_1(1), so the Bernoulli numbers can be calculated using Cramer's rule acting on this entry's matrix and, therefore, from the ratios of volumes of parallelepipeds determined by the columns of this entry's square submatrices. - Tom Copeland, Jul 10 2018
Umbrally composing the row polynomials with B_n(x), the Bernoulli polynomials, gives (B.(x)+1)^(n+1) - (B.(x))^(n+1) = d[x^(n+1)]/dx = (n+1)*x^n, so multiplying this entry as a lower triangular matrix (LTM) by the LTM of the coefficients of the Bernoulli polynomials gives the diagonal matrix of the natural numbers. Then the inverse matrix of this entry has the elements B_(n,k)/(k+1), where B_(n,k) is the coefficient of x^k for B_n(x), and the e.g.f. (1/x) (e^(xt)-1)/(e^t-1). (End)

Examples

			T(4,2) = 0+0+1+3+6 = 10 = binomial(5, 2).
Triangle T(n,k) begins:
n\k 0  1  2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9 10 11
0:  1
1:  1  2
2:  1  3  3
3:  1  4  6   4
4:  1  5 10  10   5
5:  1  6 15  20  15   6
6:  1  7 21  35  35  21   7
7:  1  8 28  56  70  56  28   8
8:  1  9 36  84 126 126  84  36  9
9:  1 10 45 120 210 252 210 120 45   10
10: 1 11 55 165 330 462 462 330 165  55 11
11: 1 12 66 220 495 792 924 792 495 220 66 12
... Reformatted. - _Wolfdieter Lang_, Nov 04 2014
.
Can be seen as the square array A(n, k) = binomial(n + k + 1, n) read by descending antidiagonals. A(n, k) is the number of monotone nondecreasing functions f: {1,2,..,k} -> {1,2,..,n}. - _Peter Luschny_, Aug 25 2019
[0]  1,  1,   1,   1,    1,    1,     1,     1,     1, ... A000012
[1]  2,  3,   4,   5,    6,    7,     8,     9,    10, ... A000027
[2]  3,  6,  10,  15,   21,   28,    36,    45,    55, ... A000217
[3]  4, 10,  20,  35,   56,   84,   120,   165,   220, ... A000292
[4]  5, 15,  35,  70,  126,  210,   330,   495,   715, ... A000332
[5]  6, 21,  56, 126,  252,  462,   792,  1287,  2002, ... A000389
[6]  7, 28,  84, 210,  462,  924,  1716,  3003,  5005, ... A000579
[7]  8, 36, 120, 330,  792, 1716,  3432,  6435, 11440, ... A000580
[8]  9, 45, 165, 495, 1287, 3003,  6435, 12870, 24310, ... A000581
[9] 10, 55, 220, 715, 2002, 5005, 11440, 24310, 48620, ... A000582
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • GAP
    Flat(List([0..10],n->List([0..n],k->Binomial(n+1,k)))); # Muniru A Asiru, Jul 10 2018
    
  • Haskell
    a074909 n k = a074909_tabl !! n !! k
    a074909_row n = a074909_tabl !! n
    a074909_tabl = iterate
       (\row -> zipWith (+) ([0] ++ row) (row ++ [1])) [1]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 25 2012
    
  • Magma
    /* As triangle */ [[Binomial(n+1,k): k in [0..n]]: n in [0.. 15]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Jul 22 2018
    
  • Maple
    A074909 := proc(n,k)
        if k > n or k < 0 then
            0;
        else
            binomial(n+1,k) ;
        end if;
    end proc: # Zerinvary Lajos, Nov 09 2006
  • Mathematica
    Flatten[Join[{1}, Table[Sum[Binomial[k, m], {k, 0, n}], {n, 0, 12}, {m, 0, n}] ]] (* or *) Flatten[Join[{1}, Table[Binomial[n, m], {n, 12}, {m, n}]]]
  • PARI
    print1(1);for(n=1,10,for(k=1,n,print1(", "binomial(n,k)))) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Mar 26 2013
    
  • Python
    from math import comb, isqrt
    def A074909(n): return comb(r:=(m:=isqrt(k:=n+1<<1))+(k>m*(m+1)),n-comb(r,2)) # Chai Wah Wu, Nov 12 2024

Formula

T(n, k) = Sum_{i=0..n} C(i, n-k) = C(n+1, k).
Row n has g.f. (1+x)^(n+1)-x^(n+1).
E.g.f.: ((1+x)*e^t - x) e^(x*t). The row polynomials p_n(x) satisfy dp_n(x)/dx = (n+1)*p_(n-1)(x). - Tom Copeland, Jul 10 2018
T(n, k) = T(n-1, k-1) + T(n-1, k) for k: 0Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 18 2005
T(n,k) = T(n-1,k) + 2*T(n-1,k-1) - T(n-2,k-1) - T(n-2,k-2), T(0,0)=1, T(1,0)=1, T(1,1)=2, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n. - Philippe Deléham, Dec 27 2013
G.f. for column k (with leading zeros): x^(k-1)*(1/(1-x)^(k+1)-1), k >= 0. - Wolfdieter Lang, Nov 04 2014
Up(n, x+y) = (Up(.,x)+ y)^n = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k) Up(k,x)*y^(n-k), where Up(n,x) = ((x+1)^(n+1)-x^(n+1)) / (n+1) = P(n,x)/(n+1) with P(n,x) the n-th row polynomial of this entry. dUp(n,x)/dx = n * Up(n-1,x) and dP(n,x)/dx = (n+1)*P(n-1,x). - Tom Copeland, Nov 14 2014
The o.g.f. GF(x,t) = x / ((1-t*x)*(1-(1+t)x)) = x + (1+2t)*x^2 + (1+3t+3t^2)*x^3 + ... has the inverse GFinv(x,t) = (1+(1+2t)x-sqrt(1+(1+2t)*2x+x^2))/(2t(1+t)x) in x about 0, which generates the row polynomials (mod row signs) of A033282. The reciprocal of the o.g.f., i.e., x/GF(x,t), gives the free cumulants (1, -(1+2t) , t(1+t) , 0, 0, ...) associated with the moments defined by GFinv, and, in fact, these free cumulants generate these moments through the noncrossing partitions of A134264. The associated e.g.f. and relations to Grassmannians are described in A248727, whose polynomials are the basis for an Appell sequence of polynomials that are umbral compositional inverses of the Appell sequence formed from this entry's polynomials (distinct from the one described in the comments above, without the normalizing reciprocal). - Tom Copeland, Jan 07 2015
T(n, k) = (1/k!) * Sum_{i=0..k} Stirling1(k,i)*(n+1)^i, for 0<=k<=n. - Ridouane Oudra, Oct 23 2022

Extensions

I added an initial 1 at the suggestion of Paul Barry, which makes the triangle a little nicer but may mean that some of the formulas will now need adjusting. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 11 2003
Formula section edited, checked and corrected by Wolfdieter Lang, Nov 04 2014

A155585 a(n) = 2^n*E(n, 1) where E(n, x) are the Euler polynomials.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 0, -2, 0, 16, 0, -272, 0, 7936, 0, -353792, 0, 22368256, 0, -1903757312, 0, 209865342976, 0, -29088885112832, 0, 4951498053124096, 0, -1015423886506852352, 0, 246921480190207983616, 0, -70251601603943959887872, 0, 23119184187809597841473536, 0
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Paul D. Hanna, Jan 24 2009

Keywords

Comments

Previous name was: a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n-1} (-1)^(k)*C(n-1,k)*a(n-1-k)*a(k) for n>0 with a(0)=1.
Factorials have a similar recurrence: f(n) = Sum_{k=0..n-1} C(n-1,k)*f(n-1-k)*f(k), n > 0.
Related to A102573: letting T(q,r) be the coefficient of n^(r+1) in the polynomial 2^(q-n)/n times Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k)*k^q, then A155585(x) = Sum_{k=0..x-1} T(x,k)*(-1)^k. See Mathematica code below. - John M. Campbell, Nov 16 2011
For the difference table and the relation to the Seidel triangle see A239005. - Paul Curtz, Mar 06 2014
From Tom Copeland, Sep 29 2015: (Start)
Let z(t) = 2/(e^(2t)+1) = 1 + tanh(-t) = e.g.f.(-t) for this sequence = 1 - t + 2*t^3/3! - 16*t^5/5! + ... .
dlog(z(t))/dt = -z(-t), so the raising operators that generate Appell polynomials associated with this sequence, A081733, and its reciprocal, A119468, contain z(-d/dx) = e.g.f.(d/dx) as the differential operator component.
dz(t)/dt = z*(z-2), so the assorted relations to a Ricatti equation, the Eulerian numbers A008292, and the Bernoulli numbers in the Rzadkowski link hold.
From Michael Somos's formula below (drawing on the Edwards link), y(t,1)=1 and x(t,1) = (1-e^(2t))/(1+e^(2t)), giving z(t) = 1 + x(t,1). Compare this to the formulas in my list in A008292 (Sep 14 2014) with a=1 and b=-1,
A) A(t,1,-1) = A(t) = -x(t,1) = (e^(2t)-1)/(1+e^(2t)) = tanh(t) = t + -2*t^3/3! + 16*t^5/5! + -272*t^7/7! + ... = e.g.f.(t) - 1 (see A000182 and A000111)
B) Ainv(t) = log((1+t)/(1-t))/2 = tanh^(-1)(t) = t + t^3/3 + t^5/5 + ..., the compositional inverse of A(t)
C) dA/dt = (1-A^2), relating A(t) to a Weierstrass elliptic function
D) ((1-t^2)d/dt)^n t evaluated at t=0, a generator for the sequence A(t)
F) FGL(x,y)= (x+y)/(1+xy) = A(Ainv(x) + Ainv(y)), a related formal group law corresponding to the Lorentz FGL (Lorentz transformation--addition of parallel velocities in special relativity) and the Atiyah-Singer signature and the elliptic curve (1-t^2)*s = t^3 in Tate coordinates according to the Lenart and Zainoulline link and the Buchstaber and Bunkova link (pp. 35-37) in A008292.
A133437 maps the reciprocal odd natural numbers through the refined faces of associahedra to a(n).
A145271 links the differential relations to the geometry of flow maps, vector fields, and thereby formal group laws. See Mathworld for links of tanh to other geometries and statistics.
Since the a(n) are related to normalized values of the Bernoulli numbers and the Riemann zeta and Dirichlet eta functions, there are links to Witten's work on volumes of manifolds in two-dimensional quantum gauge theories and the Kervaire-Milnor formula for homotopy groups of hyperspheres (see my link below).
See A101343, A111593 and A059419 for this and the related generator (1 + t^2) d/dt and associated polynomials. (End)
With the exception of the first term (1), entries are the alternating sums of the rows of the Eulerian triangle, A008292. - Gregory Gerard Wojnar, Sep 29 2018

Examples

			E.g.f.: 1 + x - 2*x^3/3! + 16*x^5/5! - 272*x^7/7! + 7936*x^9/9! -+ ... = exp(x)/cosh(x).
O.g.f.: 1 + x - 2*x^3 + 16*x^5 - 272*x^7 + 7936*x^9 - 353792*x^11 +- ...
O.g.f.: 1 + x/(1+2*x) + 2!*x^2/((1+2*x)*(1+4*x)) + 3!*x^3/((1+2*x)*(1+4*x)*(1+6*x)) + ...
		

Crossrefs

Equals row sums of A119879. - Johannes W. Meijer, Apr 20 2011
(-1)^n*a(n) are the alternating row sums of A123125. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jul 12 2017

Programs

  • Maple
    A155585 := n -> 2^n*euler(n, 1): # Peter Luschny, Jan 26 2009
    a := proc(n) option remember; `if`(n::even, 0^n, -(-1)^n - add((-1)^k*binomial(n,k) *a(n-k), k = 1..n-1)) end: # Peter Luschny, Jun 01 2016
    # Or via the recurrence of the Fubini polynomials:
    F := proc(n) option remember; if n = 0 then return 1 fi;
    expand(add(binomial(n, k)*F(n-k)*x, k = 1..n)) end:
    a := n -> (-2)^n*subs(x = -1/2, F(n)):
    seq(a(n), n = 0..30); # Peter Luschny, May 21 2021
  • Mathematica
    a[m_] := Sum[(-2)^(m - k) k! StirlingS2[m, k], {k, 0, m}] (* Peter Luschny, Apr 29 2009 *)
    poly[q_] :=  2^(q-n)/n*FunctionExpand[Sum[Binomial[n, k]*k^q, {k, 0, n}]]; T[q_, r_] :=  First[Take[CoefficientList[poly[q], n], {r+1, r+1}]]; Table[Sum[T[x, k]*(-1)^k, {k, 0, x-1}], {x, 1, 16}] (* John M. Campbell, Nov 16 2011 *)
    f[n_] := (-1)^n 2^(n+1) PolyLog[-n, -1]; f[0] = -f[0]; Array[f, 27, 0] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jun 28 2012 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=if(n==0,1,sum(k=0,n-1,(-1)^(k)*binomial(n-1,k)*a(n-1-k)*a(k)))
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=local(X=x+x*O(x^n));n!*polcoeff(exp(X)/cosh(X),n)
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=polcoeff(sum(m=0,n,m!*x^m/prod(k=1,m,1+2*k*x+x*O(x^n))),n) \\ Paul D. Hanna, Jul 20 2011
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = local(A); if( n<0, 0, A = x * O(x^n); n! * polcoeff( 1 + sinh(x + A) / cosh(x + A), n))} /* Michael Somos, Jan 16 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=local(A=1+x);for(i=1,n,A=sum(k=0,n,intformal(subst(A,x,-x)+x*O(x^n))^k/k!));n!*polcoeff(A,n)
    for(n=0,30,print1(a(n),", ")) \\ Paul D. Hanna, Nov 25 2013
    
  • Python
    from sympy import bernoulli
    def A155585(n): return (((2<<(m:=n+1))-2)*bernoulli(m)<>1) if n&1 else (0 if n else 1) # Chai Wah Wu, Apr 14 2023
  • Sage
    def A155585(n) :
        if n == 0 : return 1
        return add(add((-1)^(j+1)*binomial(n+1,k-j)*j^n for j in (0..k)) for k in (1..n))
    [A155585(n) for n in (0..26)] # Peter Luschny, Jul 23 2012
    
  • Sage
    def A155585_list(n): # Akiyama-Tanigawa algorithm
        A = [0]*(n+1); R = []
        for m in range(n+1) :
            d = divmod(m+3, 4)
            A[m] = 0 if d[1] == 0 else (-1)^d[0]/2^(m//2)
            for j in range(m, 0, -1) :
                A[j - 1] = j * (A[j - 1] - A[j])
            R.append(A[0])
        return R
    A155585_list(30) # Peter Luschny, Mar 09 2014
    

Formula

E.g.f.: exp(x)*sech(x) = exp(x)/cosh(x). (See A009006.) - Paul Barry, Mar 15 2006
Sequence of absolute values is A009006 (e.g.f. 1+tan(x)).
O.g.f.: Sum_{n>=0} n! * x^n / Product_{k=1..n} (1 + 2*k*x). - Paul D. Hanna, Jul 20 2011
a(n) = 2^n*E_{n}(1) where E_{n}(x) are the Euler polynomials. - Peter Luschny, Jan 26 2009
a(n) = EL_{n}(-1) where EL_{n}(x) are the Eulerian polynomials. - Peter Luschny, Aug 03 2010
a(n+1) = (4^n-2^n)*B_n(1)/n, where B_{n}(x) are the Bernoulli polynomials (B_n(1) = B_n for n <> 1). - Peter Luschny, Apr 22 2009
G.f.: 1/(1-x+x^2/(1-x+4*x^2/(1-x+9*x^2/(1-x+16*x^2/(1-...))))) (continued fraction). - Paul Barry, Mar 30 2010
G.f.: -log(x/(exp(x)-1))/x = Sum_{n>=0} a(n)*x^n/(2^(n+1)*(2^(n+1)-1)*n!). - Vladimir Kruchinin, Nov 05 2011
E.g.f.: exp(x)/cosh(x) = 2/(1+exp(-2*x)) = 2/(G(0) + 1); G(k) = 1 - 2*x/(2*k + 1 - x*(2*k+1)/(x - (k+1)/G(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Dec 10 2011
E.g.f. is x(t,1) + y(t,1) where x(t,a) and y(t,a) satisfy y(t,a)^2 = (a^2 - x(t,a)^2) / (1 - a^2 * x(t,a)^2) and dx(t,a) / dt = y(t,a) * (1 - a * x(t,a)^2) and are the elliptic functions of Edwards. - Michael Somos, Jan 16 2012
E.g.f.: 1/(1 - x/(1+x/(1 - x/(3+x/(1 - x/(5+x/(1 - x/(7+x/(1 - x/(9+x/(1 +...))))))))))), a continued fraction. - Paul D. Hanna, Feb 11 2012
E.g.f. satisfies: A(x) = Sum_{n>=0} Integral( A(-x) dx )^n / n!. - Paul D. Hanna, Nov 25 2013
a(n) = -2^(n+1)*Li_{-n}(-1). - Peter Luschny, Jun 28 2012
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^(j+1)*binomial(n+1,k-j)*j^n for n > 0. - Peter Luschny, Jul 23 2012
From Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Oct 25 2012 to Dec 16 2013: (Start)
Continued fractions:
G.f.: 1 + x/T(0) where T(k) = 1 + (k+1)*(k+2)*x^2/T(k+1).
E.g.f.: exp(x)/cosh(x) = 1 + x/S(0) where S(k) = (2*k+1) + x^2/S(k+1).
E.g.f.: 1 + x/(U(0)+x) where U(k) = 4*k+1 - x/(1 + x/(4*k+3 - x/(1 + x/U(k+1)))).
E.g.f.: 1 + tanh(x) = 4*x/(G(0)+2*x) where G(k) = 1 - (k+1)/(1 - 2*x/(2*x + (k+1)^2/G(k+1)));
G.f.: 1 + x/G(0) where G(k) = 1 + 2*x^2*(2*k+1)^2 - x^4*(2*k+1)*(2*k+2)^2*(2*k+3)/G(k+1) (due to Stieltjes).
E.g.f.: 1 + x/(G(0) + x) where G(k) = 1 - 2*x/(1 + (k+1)/G(k+1)).
G.f.: 2 - 1/Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 + x*(k+1)/( 1 - x*(k+1)/Q(k+1)).
G.f.: 2 - 1/Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 + x*k^2 + x/(1 - x*(k+1)^2/Q(k+1)).
G.f.: 1/Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 - 2*x + x*(k+1)/(1-x*(k+1)/Q(k+1)).
G.f.: 1/Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 - x*(k+1)/(1 + x*(k+1)/Q(k+1)).
E.g.f.: 1 + x*Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 - x^2/( x^2 + (2*k+1)*(2*k+3)/Q(k+1)).
G.f.: 2 - T(0)/(1+x) where T(k) = 1 - x^2*(k+1)^2/(x^2*(k+1)^2 + (1+x)^2/T(k+1)).
E.g.f.: 1/(x - Q(0)) where Q(k) = 4*k^2 - 1 + 2*x + x^2*(2*k-1)*(2*k+3)/Q(k+1). (End)
G.f.: 1 / (1 - b(1)*x / (1 - b(2)*x / (1 - b(3)*x / ... ))) where b = A001057. - Michael Somos, Jan 03 2013
From Paul Curtz, Mar 06 2014: (Start)
a(2n) = A000007(n).
a(2n+1) = (-1)^n*A000182(n+1).
a(n) is the binomial transform of A122045(n).
a(n) is the row sum of A081658. For fractional Euler numbers see A238800.
a(n) + A122045(n) = 2, 1, -1, -2, 5, 16, ... = -A163982(n).
a(n) - A122045(n) = -A163747(n).
a(n) is the Akiyama-Tanigawa transform applied to 1, 0, -1/2, -1/2, -1/4, 0, ... = A046978(n+3)/A016116(n). (End)
a(n) = 2^(2*n+1)*(zeta(-n,1/2) - zeta(-n, 1)), where zeta(a, z) is the generalized Riemann zeta function. - Peter Luschny, Mar 11 2015
a(n) = 2^(n + 1)*(2^(n + 1) - 1)*Bernoulli(n + 1, 1)/(n + 1). (From Bill Gosper, Oct 28 2015) - N. J. A. Sloane, Oct 28 2015 [See the above comment from Peter Luschny, Apr 22 2009.]
a(n) = -(n mod 2)*((-1)^n + Sum_{k=1..n-1} (-1)^k*C(n,k)*a(n-k)) for n >= 1. - Peter Luschny, Jun 01 2016
a(n) = (-2)^n*F_{n}(-1/2), where F_{n}(x) is the Fubini polynomial. - Peter Luschny, May 21 2021

Extensions

New name from Peter Luschny, Mar 12 2015

A134264 Coefficients T(j, k) of a partition transform for Lagrange compositional inversion of a function or generating series in terms of the coefficients of the power series for its reciprocal. Enumeration of noncrossing partitions and primitive parking functions. T(n,k) for n >= 1 and 1 <= k <= A000041(n-1), an irregular triangle read by rows.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 3, 1, 1, 4, 2, 6, 1, 1, 5, 5, 10, 10, 10, 1, 1, 6, 6, 3, 15, 30, 5, 20, 30, 15, 1, 1, 7, 7, 7, 21, 42, 21, 21, 35, 105, 35, 35, 70, 21, 1, 1, 8, 8, 8, 4, 28, 56, 56, 28, 28, 56, 168, 84, 168, 14, 70, 280, 140, 56, 140, 28, 1, 1, 9, 9, 9, 9, 36, 72
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Tom Copeland, Jan 14 2008

Keywords

Comments

Coefficients are listed in Abramowitz and Stegun order (A036036).
Given an invertible function f(t) analytic about t=0 (or a formal power series) with f(0)=0 and Df(0) not equal to 0, form h(t) = t / f(t) and let h_n denote the coefficient of t^n in h(t).
Lagrange inversion gives the compositional inverse about t=0 as g(t) = Sum_{j>=1} ( t^j * (1/j) * Sum_{permutations s with s(1) + s(2) + ... + s(j) = j - 1} h_s(1) * h_s(2) * ... * h_s(j) ) = t * T(1,1) * h_0 + Sum_{j>=2} ( t^j * Sum_{k=1..(# of partitions for j-1)} T(j,k) * H(j-1,k ; h_0,h_1,...) ), where H(j-1,k ; h_0,h_1,...) is the k-th partition for h_1 through h_(j-1) corresponding to n=j-1 on page 831 of Abramowitz and Stegun (ordered as in A&S) with (h_0)^(j-m)=(h_0)^(n+1-m) appended to each partition subsumed under n and m of A&S.
Denoting h_n by (n') for brevity, to 8th order in t,
g(t) = t * (0')
+ t^2 * [ (0') (1') ]
+ t^3 * [ (0')^2 (2') + (0') (1')^2 ]
+ t^4 * [ (0')^3 (3') + 3 (0')^2 (1') (2') + (0') (1')^3 ]
+ t^5 * [ (0')^4 (4') + 4 (0')^3 (1') (3') + 2 (0')^3 (2')^2 + 6 (0')^2 (1')^2 (2') + (0') (1')^4 ]
+ t^6 * [ (0')^5 (5') + 5 (0')^4 (1') (4') + 5 (0')^4 (2') (3') + 10 (0')^3 (1')^2 (3') + 10 (0')^3 (1') (2')^2 + 10 (0')^2 (1')^3 (2') + (0') (1')^5 ]
+ t^7 * [ (0')^6 (6') + 6 (0')^5 (1') (5') + 6 (0')^5 (2') (4') + 3 (0')^5 (3')^2 + 15 (0')^4 (1')^2 (4') + 30 (0')^4 (1') (2') (3') + 5 (0')^4 (2')^3 + 20 (0')^3 (1')^3 (3') + 30 (0')^3 (1')^2 (2')^2 + 15 (0')^2 (1')^4 (2') + (0') (1')^6]
+ t^8 * [ (0')^7 (7') + 7 (0')^6 (1') (6') + 7 (0')^6 (2') (5') + 7 (0')^6 (3') (4') + 21 (0')^5 (1')^2* (5') + 42 (0')^5 (1') (2') (4') + 21 (0')^5 (1') (3')^2 + 21 (0')^5 (2')^2 (3') + 35 (0')^4 (1')^3 (4') + 105 (0)^4 (1')^2 (2') (3') + 35 (0')^4 (1') (2')^3 + 35 (0')^3 (1')^4 (3') + 70 (0')^3 (1')^3 (2')^2 + 21 (0')^2 (1')^5 (2') + (0') (1')^7 ]
+ ..., where from the formula section, for example, T(8,1',2',...,7') = 7! / ((8 - (1'+ 2' + ... + 7'))! * 1'! * 2'! * ... * 7'!) are the coefficients of the integer partitions (1')^1' (2')^2' ... (7')^7' in the t^8 term.
A125181 is an extended, reordered version of the above sequence, omitting the leading 1, with alternate interpretations.
If the coefficients of partitions with the same exponent for h_0 are summed within rows, A001263 is obtained, omitting the leading 1.
From identification of the elements of the inversion with those on page 25 of the Ardila et al. link, the coefficients of the irregular table enumerate non-crossing partitions on [n]. - Tom Copeland, Oct 13 2014
From Tom Copeland, Oct 28-29 2014: (Start)
Operating with d/d(1') = d/d(h_1) on the n-th partition polynomial Prt(n;h_0,h_1,..,h_n) in square brackets above associated with t^(n+1) generates n * Prt(n-1;h_0,h_1,..,h_(n-1)); therefore, the polynomials are an Appell sequence of polynomials in the indeterminate h_1 when h_0=1 (a special type of Sheffer sequence).
Consequently, umbrally, [Prt(.;1,x,h_2,..) + y]^n = Prt(n;1,x+y,h_2,..); that is, Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k) * Prt(k;1,x,h_2,..) * y^(n-k) = Prt(n;1,x+y,h_2,..).
Or, e^(x*z) * exp[Prt(.;1,0,h_2,..) * z] = exp[Prt(.;1,x,h_2,..) * z]. Then with x = h_1 = -(1/2) * d^2[f(t)]/dt^2 evaluated at t=0, the formal Laplace transform from z to 1/t of this expression generates g(t), the comp. inverse of f(t), when h_0 = 1 = df(t)/dt eval. at t=0.
I.e., t / (1 - t*(x + Prt(.;1,0,h_2,..))) = t / (1 - t*Prt(.;1,x,h_2,..)) = g(t), interpreted umbrally, when h_0 = 1.
(End)
Connections to and between arrays associated to the Catalan (A000108 and A007317), Riordan (A005043), Fibonacci (A000045), and Fine (A000957) numbers and to lattice paths, e.g., the Motzkin, Dyck, and Łukasiewicz, can be made explicit by considering the inverse in x of the o.g.f. of A104597(x,-t), i.e., f(x) = P(Cinv(x),t-1) = Cinv(x) / (1 + (t-1)*Cinv(x)) = x*(1-x) / (1 + (t-1)*x*(1-x)) = (x-x^2) / (1 + (t-1)*(x-x^2)), where Cinv(x) = x*(1-x) is the inverse of C(x) = (1 - sqrt(1-4*x)) / 2, a shifted o.g.f. for the Catalan numbers, and P(x,t) = x / (1+t*x) with inverse Pinv(x,t) = -P(-x,t) = x / (1-t*x). Then h(x,t) = x / f(x,t) = x * (1+(t-1)Cinv(x)) / Cinv(x) = 1 + t*x + x^2 + x^3 + ..., i.e., h_1=t and all other coefficients are 1, so the inverse of f(x,t) in x, which is explicitly in closed form finv(x,t) = C(Pinv(x,t-1)), is given by A091867, whose coefficients are sums of the refined Narayana numbers above obtained by setting h_1=(1')=t in the partition polynomials and all other coefficients to one. The group generators C(x) and P(x,t) and their inverses allow associations to be easily made between these classic number arrays. - Tom Copeland, Nov 03 2014
From Tom Copeland, Nov 10 2014: (Start)
Inverting in x with t a parameter, let F(x;t,n) = x - t*x^(n+1). Then h(x) = x / F(x;t,n) = 1 / (1-t*x^n) = 1 + t*x^n + t^2*x^(2n) + t^3*x^(3n) + ..., so h_k vanishes unless k = m*n with m an integer in which case h_k = t^m.
Finv(x;t,n) = Sum_{j>=0} {binomial((n+1)*j,j) / (n*j + 1)} * t^j * x^(n*j + 1), which gives the Catalan numbers for n=1, and the Fuss-Catalan sequences for n>1 (see A001764, n=2). [Added braces to disambiguate the formula. - N. J. A. Sloane, Oct 20 2015]
This relation reveals properties of the partitions and sums of the coefficients of the array. For n=1, h_k = t^k for all k, implying that the row sums are the Catalan numbers. For n = 2, h_k for k odd vanishes, implying that there are no blocks with only even-indexed h_k on the even-numbered rows and that only the blocks containing only even-sized bins contribute to the odd-row sums giving the Fuss-Catalan numbers for n=2. And so on, for n > 2.
These relations are reflected in any combinatorial structures enumerated by this array and the partitions, such as the noncrossing partitions depicted for a five-element set (a pentagon) in Wikipedia.
(End)
From Tom Copeland, Nov 12 2014: (Start)
An Appell sequence possesses an umbral inverse sequence (cf. A249548). The partition polynomials here, Prt(n;1,h_1,...), are an Appell sequence in the indeterminate h_1=u, so have an e.g.f. exp[Prt(.;1,u,h_2...)*t] = e^(u*t) * exp[Prt(.;1,0,h2,...)*t] with umbral inverses with an e.g.f e^(-u*t) / exp[Prt(.;1,0,h2,...)*t]. This makes contact with the formalism of A133314 (cf. also A049019 and A019538) and the signed, refined face partition polynomials of the permutahedra (or their duals), which determine the reciprocal of exp[Prt(.,0,u,h2...)*t] (cf. A249548) or exp[Prt(.;1,u,h2,...)*t], forming connections among the combinatorics of permutahedra and the noncrossing partitions, Dyck paths and trees (cf. A125181), and many other important structures isomorphic to the partitions of this entry, as well as to formal cumulants through A127671 and algebraic structures of Lie algebras. (Cf. relationship of permutahedra with the Eulerians A008292.)
(End)
From Tom Copeland, Nov 24 2014: (Start)
The n-th row multiplied by n gives the number of terms in the homogeneous symmetric monomials generated by [x(1) + x(2) + ... + x(n+1)]^n under the umbral mapping x(m)^j = h_j, for any m. E.g., [a + b + c]^2 = [a^2 + b^2 + c^2] + 2 * [a*b + a*c + b*c] is mapped to [3 * h_2] + 2 * [3 * h_1^2], and 3 * A134264(3) = 3 *(1,1)= (3,3) the number of summands in the two homogeneous polynomials in the square brackets. For n=3, [a + b + c + d]^3 = [a^3 + b^3 + ...] + 3 [a*b^2 + a*c^2 + ...] + 6 [a*b*c + a*c*d + ...] maps to [4 * h_3] + 3 [12 * h_1 * h_2] + 6 [4 * (h_1)^3], and the number of terms in the brackets is given by 4 * A134264(4) = 4 * (1,3,1) = (4,12,4).
The further reduced expression is 4 h_3 + 36 h_1 h_2 + 24 (h_1)^3 = A248120(4) with h_0 = 1. The general relation is n * A134264(n) = A248120(n) / A036038(n-1) where the arithmetic is performed on the coefficients of matching partitions in each row n.
Abramowitz and Stegun give combinatorial interpretations of A036038 and relations to other number arrays.
This can also be related to repeated umbral composition of Appell sequences and topology with the Bernoulli numbers playing a special role. See the Todd class link.
(End)
These partition polynomials are dubbed the Voiculescu polynomials on page 11 of the He and Jejjala link. - Tom Copeland, Jan 16 2015
See page 5 of the Josuat-Verges et al. reference for a refinement of these partition polynomials into a noncommutative version composed of nondecreasing parking functions. - Tom Copeland, Oct 05 2016
(Per Copeland's Oct 13 2014 comment.) The number of non-crossing set partitions whose block sizes are the parts of the n-th integer partition, where the ordering of integer partitions is first by total, then by length, then lexicographically by the reversed sequence of parts. - Gus Wiseman, Feb 15 2019
With h_0 = 1 and the other h_n replaced by suitably signed partition polynomials of A263633, the refined face partition polynomials for the associahedra of normalized A133437 with a shift in indices are obtained (cf. In the Realm of Shadows). - Tom Copeland, Sep 09 2019
Number of primitive parking functions associated to each partition of n. See Lemma 3.8 on p. 28 of Rattan. - Tom Copeland, Sep 10 2019
With h_n = n + 1, the d_k (A006013) of Table 2, p. 18, of Jong et al. are obtained, counting the n-point correlation functions in a quantum field theory. - Tom Copeland, Dec 25 2019
By inspection of the diagrams on Robert Dickau's website, one can see the relationship between the monomials of this entry and the connectivity of the line segments of the noncrossing partitions. - Tom Copeland, Dec 25 2019
Speicher has examples of the first four inversion partition polynomials on pp. 22 and 23 with his k_n equivalent to h_n = (n') here with h_0 = 1. Identifying z = t, C(z) = t/f(t) = h(t), and M(z) = f^(-1)(t)/t, then statement (3), on p. 43, of Theorem 3.26, C(z M(z)) = M(z), is equivalent to substituting f^(-1)(t) for t in t/f(t), and statement (4), M(z/C(z)) = C(z), to substituting f(t) for t in f^(-1)(t)/t. - Tom Copeland, Dec 08 2021
Given a Laurent series of the form f(z) = 1/z + h_1 + h_2 z + h_3 z^2 + ..., the compositional inverse is f^(-1)(z) = 1/z + Prt(1;1,h_1)/z^2 + Prt(2;1,h_1,h_2)/z^3 + ... = 1/z + h_1/z^2 + (h_1^2 + h_2)/z^3 + (h_1^3 + 3 h_1 h_2 + h_3)/z^4 + (h_1^4 + 6 h_1^2 h_2 + 4 h_1 h_3 + 2 h_2^2 + h_4)/z^5 + ... for which the polynomials in the numerators are the partition polynomials of this entry. For example, this formula applied to the q-expansion of Klein's j-invariant / function with coefficients A000521, related to monstrous moonshine, gives the compositional inverse with the coefficients A091406 (see He and Jejjala). - Tom Copeland, Dec 18 2021
The partition polynomials of A350499 'invert' the polynomials of this entry giving the indeterminates h_n. A multinomial formula for the coefficients of the partition polynomials of this entry, equivalent to the multinomial formula presented in the first four sentences of the formula section below, is presented in the MathOverflow question referenced in A350499. - Tom Copeland, Feb 19 2022

Examples

			1) With f(t) = t / (t-1), then h(t) = -(1-t), giving h_0 = -1, h_1 = 1 and h_n = 0 for n>1. Then g(t) = -t - t^2 - t^3 - ... = t / (t-1).
2) With f(t) = t*(1-t), then h(t) = 1 / (1-t), giving h_n = 1 for all n. The compositional inverse of this f(t) is g(t) = t*A(t) where A(t) is the o.g.f. for the Catalan numbers; therefore the sum over k of T(j,k), i.e., the row sum, is the Catalan number A000108(j-1).
3) With f(t) = (e^(-a*t)-1) / (-a), h(t) = Sum_{n>=0} Bernoulli(n) * (-a*t)^n / n! and g(t) = log(1-a*t) / (-a) = Sum_{n>=1} a^(n-1) * t^n / n. Therefore with h_n = Bernoulli(n) * (-a)^n / n!, Sum_{permutations s with s(1)+s(2)+...+s(j)=j-1} h_s(1) * h_s(2) * ... * h_s(j) = j * Sum_{k=1..(# of partitions for j-1)} T(j,k) * H(j-1,k ; h_0,h_1,...) = a^(j-1). Note, in turn, Sum_{a=1..m} a^(j-1) = (Bernoulli(j,m+1) - Bernoulli(j)) / j for the Bernoulli polynomials and numbers, for j>1.
4) With f(t,x) = t / (x-1+1/(1-t)), then h(t,x) = x-1+1/(1-t), giving (h_0)=x and (h_n)=1 for n>1. Then g(t,x) = (1-(1-x)*t-sqrt(1-2*(1+x)*t+((x-1)*t)^2)) / 2, a shifted o.g.f. in t for the Narayana polynomials in x of A001263.
5) With h(t)= o.g.f. of A075834, but with A075834(1)=2 rather than 1, which is the o.g.f. for the number of connected positroids on [n] (cf. Ardila et al., p. 25), g(t) is the o.g.f. for A000522, which is the o.g.f. for the number of positroids on [n]. (Added Oct 13 2014 by author.)
6) With f(t,x) = x / ((1-t*x)*(1-(1+t)*x)), an o.g.f. for A074909, the reverse face polynomials of the simplices, h(t,x) = (1-t*x) * (1-(1+t)*x) with h_0=1, h_1=-(1+2*t), and h_2=t*(1+t), giving as the inverse in x about 0 the o.g.f. (1+(1+2*t)*x-sqrt(1+(1+2*t)*2*x+x^2)) / (2*t*(1+t)*x) for signed A033282, the reverse face polynomials of the Stasheff polytopes, or associahedra. Cf. A248727. (Added Jan 21 2015 by author.)
7) With f(x,t) = x / ((1+x)*(1+t*x)), an o.g.f. for the polynomials (-1)^n * (1 + t + ... + t^n), h(t,x) = (1+x) * (1+t*x) with h_0=1, h_1=(1+t), and h_2=t, giving as the inverse in x about 0 the o.g.f. (1-(1+t)*x-sqrt(1-2*(1+t)*x+((t-1)*x)^2)) / (2*x*t) for the Narayana polynomials A001263. Cf. A046802. (Added Jan 24 2015 by author.)
From _Gus Wiseman_, Feb 15 2019: (Start)
Triangle begins:
   1
   1
   1   1
   1   3   1
   1   4   2   6   1
   1   5   5  10  10  10   1
   1   6   6   3  15  30   5  20  30  15   1
   1   7   7   7  21  42  21  21  35 105  35  35  70  21   1
Row 5 counts the following non-crossing set partitions:
  {{1234}}  {{1}{234}}  {{12}{34}}  {{1}{2}{34}}  {{1}{2}{3}{4}}
            {{123}{4}}  {{14}{23}}  {{1}{23}{4}}
            {{124}{3}}              {{12}{3}{4}}
            {{134}{2}}              {{1}{24}{3}}
                                    {{13}{2}{4}}
                                    {{14}{2}{3}}
(End)
		

References

  • A. Nica and R. Speicher (editors), Lectures on the Combinatorics of Free Probability, London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series: 335, Cambridge University Press, 2006 (see in particular, Eqn. 9.14 on p. 141, enumerating noncrossing partitions).

Crossrefs

(A001263,A119900) = (reduced array, associated g(x)). See A145271 for meaning and other examples of reduced and associated.
Other orderings are A125181 and A306438.
Cf. A119900 (e.g.f. for reduced W(x) with (h_0)=t and (h_n)=1 for n>0).
Cf. A248927 and A248120, "scaled" versions of this Lagrange inversion.
Cf. A091867 and A125181, for relations to lattice paths and trees.
Cf. A249548 for use of Appell properties to generate the polynomials.
Cf. A133314, A049019, A019538, A127671, and A008292 for relations to permutahedra, Eulerians.
Cf. A006013.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Binomial[Total[y],Length[y]-1]*(Length[y]-1)!/Product[Count[y,i]!,{i,Max@@y}],{n,7},{y,Sort[Sort/@IntegerPartitions[n]]}] (* Gus Wiseman, Feb 15 2019 *)
  • PARI
    C(v)={my(n=vecsum(v), S=Set(v)); n!/((n-#v+1)!*prod(i=1, #S, my(x=S[i]); (#select(y->y==x, v))!))}
    row(n)=[C(Vec(p)) | p<-partitions(n-1)]
    { for(n=1, 7, print(row(n))) } \\ Andrew Howroyd, Feb 01 2022

Formula

For j>1, there are P(j,m;a...) = j! / [ (j-m)! (a_1)! (a_2)! ... (a_(j-1))! ] permutations of h_0 through h_(j-1) in which h_0 is repeated (j-m) times; h_1, repeated a_1 times; and so on with a_1 + a_2 + ... + a_(j-1) = m.
If, in addition, a_1 + 2 * a_2 + ... + (j-1) * a_(j-1) = j-1, then each distinct combination of these arrangements is correlated with a partition of j-1.
T(j,k) is [ P(j,m;a...) / j ] for the k-th partition of j-1 as described in the comments.
For example from g(t) above, T(5,4) = (5! / ((5-3)! * 2!)) / 5 = 6 for the 4th partition under n=5-1=4 with m=3 parts in A&S.
From Tom Copeland, Sep 30 2011: (Start)
Let W(x) = 1/(df(x)/dx)= 1/{d[x/h(x)]/dx}
= [(h_0)-1+:1/(1-h.*x):]^2 / {(h_0)-:[h.x/(1-h.x)]^2:}
= [(h_0)+(h_1)x+(h_2)x^2+...]^2 / [(h_0)-(h_2)x^2-2(h_3)x^3-3(h_4)x^4-...], where :" ": denotes umbral evaluation of the expression within the colons and h. is an umbral coefficient.
Then for the partition polynomials of A134264,
Poly[n;h_0,...,h_(n-1)]=(1/n!)(W(x)*d/dx)^n x, evaluated at x=0, and the compositional inverse of f(t) is g(t) = exp(t*W(x)*d/dx) x, evaluated at x=0. Also, dg(t)/dt = W(g(t)), and g(t) gives A001263 with (h_0)=u and (h_n)=1 for n>0 and A000108 with u=1.
(End)
From Tom Copeland, Oct 20 2011: (Start)
With exp(x* PS(.,t)) = exp(t*g(x)) = exp(x*W(y)d/dy) exp(t*y) eval. at y=0, the raising (creation) and lowering (annihilation) operators defined by R PS(n,t) = PS(n+1,t) and L PS(n,t) = n*PS(n-1,t) are
R = t*W(d/dt) = t*((h_0) + (h_1)d/dt + (h_2)(d/dt)^2 + ...)^2 / ((h_0) - (h_2)(d/dt)^2 - 2(h_3)(d/dt)^3 - 3(h_4)(d/dt)^4 + ...), and
L = (d/dt)/h(d/dt) = (d/dt) 1/((h_0) + (h_1)*d/dt + (h_2)*(d/dt)^2 + ...)
Then P(n,t) = (t^n/n!) dPS(n,z)/dz eval. at z=0 are the row polynomials of A134264. (Cf. A139605, A145271, and link therein to Mathemagical Forests for relation to planted trees on p. 13.)
(End)
Using the formalism of A263634, the raising operator for the partition polynomials of this array with h_0 = 1 begins as R = h_1 + h_2 D + h_3 D^2/2! + (h_4 - h_2^2) D^3/3! + (h_5 - 5 h_2 h_3) D^4/4! + (h_6 + 5 h_2^3 - 7 h_3^2 - 9 h_2 h_4) D^5/5! + (h_7 - 14 h_2 h_5 + 56 h_2^2 h_3) D^6/6! + ... with D = d/d(h_1). - Tom Copeland, Sep 09 2016
Let h(x) = x/f^{-1}(x) = 1/[1-(c_2*x+c_3*x^2+...)], with c_n all greater than zero. Then h_n are all greater than zero and h_0 = 1. Determine P_n(t) from exp[t*f^{-1}(x)] = exp[x*P.(t)] with f^{-1}(x) = x/h(x) expressed in terms of the h_n (cf. A133314 and A263633). Then P_n(b.) = 0 gives a recursion relation for the inversion polynomials of this entry a_n = b_n/n! in terms of the lower order inversion polynomials and P_j(b.)P_k(b.) = P_j(t)P_k(t)|{t^n = b_n} = d{j,k} >= 0 is the coefficient of x^j/j!*y^k/k! in the Taylor series expansion of the formal group law FGL(x,y) = f[f^{-1}(x)+f^{-1}(y)]. - Tom Copeland, Feb 09 2018
A raising operator for the partition polynomials with h_0 = 1 regarded as a Sheffer Appell sequence in h_1 is described in A249548. - Tom Copeland, Jul 03 2018

Extensions

Added explicit t^6, t^7, and t^8 polynomials and extended initial table to include the coefficients of t^8. - Tom Copeland, Sep 14 2016
Title modified by Tom Copeland, May 28 2018
More terms from Gus Wiseman, Feb 15 2019
Title modified by Tom Copeland, Sep 10 2019
Showing 1-10 of 40 results. Next