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Unsigned Stirling numbers of first kind, s(n+1,2): a(n+1) = (n+1)*a(n) + n!.
(Formerly M2902 N1165)
+10
175
0, 1, 3, 11, 50, 274, 1764, 13068, 109584, 1026576, 10628640, 120543840, 1486442880, 19802759040, 283465647360, 4339163001600, 70734282393600, 1223405590579200, 22376988058521600, 431565146817638400, 8752948036761600000, 186244810780170240000
OFFSET
0,3
COMMENTS
Number of permutations of n+1 elements with exactly two cycles.
Number of cycles in all permutations of [n]. Example: a(3) = 11 because the permutations (1)(2)(3), (1)(23), (12)(3), (13)(2), (132), (123) have 11 cycles altogether. - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 12 2004
Row sums of A094310: In the symmetric group S_n, each permutation factors into k independent cycles; a(n) = sum k over S_n. - Harley Flanders (harley(AT)umich.edu), Jun 28 2004
The sum of the top levels of the last column over all deco polyominoes of height n. A deco polyomino is a directed column-convex polyomino in which the height, measured along the diagonal, is attained only in the last column. Example: a(2)=3 because the deco polyominoes of height 2 are the vertical and horizontal dominoes, the levels of their last columns being 2 and 1, respectively. - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 12 2006
a(n) is divisible by n for all composite n >= 6. a(2*n) is divisible by 2*n + 1. - Leroy Quet, May 20 2007
For n >= 2 the determinant of the n-1 X n-1 matrix M(i,j) = i + 2 for i = j and 1 otherwise (i,j = 1..n-1). E.g., for n = 3 the determinant of [(3, 1), (1, 4)]. See 53rd Putnam Examination, 1992, Problem B5. - Franz Vrabec, Jan 13 2008, Mar 26 2008
The numerator of the fraction when we sum (without simplification) the terms in the harmonic sequence. (1 + 1/2 = 2/2 + 1/2 = 3/2; 3/2 + 1/3 = 9/6 + 2/6 = 11/6; 11/6 + 1/4 = 44/24 + 6/24 = 50/24;...). The denominator of this fraction is n!*A000142. - Eric Desbiaux, Jan 07 2009
The asymptotic expansion of the higher order exponential integral E(x,m=2,n=1) ~ exp(-x)/x^2*(1 - 3/x + 11/x^2 - 50/x^3 + 274/x^4 - 1764/x^5 + 13068/x^6 - ...) leads to the sequence given above. See A163931 and A028421 for more information. - Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 20 2009
a(n) is the number of permutations of [n+1] containing exactly 2 cycles. Example: a(2) = 3 because the permutations (1)(23), (12)(3), (13)(2) are the only permutations of [3] with exactly 2 cycles. - Tom Woodward (twoodward(AT)macalester.edu), Nov 12 2009
It appears that, with the exception of n= 4, a(n) mod n = 0 if n is composite and = n-1 if n is prime. - Gary Detlefs, Sep 11 2010
a(n) is a multiple of A025527(n). - Charles R Greathouse IV, Oct 16 2012
Numerator of harmonic number H(n) = Sum_{i=1..n} 1/i when not reduced. See A001008 (Wolstenholme numbers) for the reduced numerators. - Rahul Jha, Feb 18 2015
The Stirling transform of this sequence is A222058(n) (Harmonic-geometric numbers). - Anton Zakharov, Aug 07 2016
a(n) is the (n-1)-st elementary symmetric function of the first n numbers. - Anton Zakharov, Nov 02 2016
The n-th iterated integral of log(x) is x^n * (n! * log(x) - a(n))/(n!)^2 + a polynomial of degree n-1 with arbitrary coefficients. This can be proven using the recurrence relation a(n) = (n-1)! + n*a(n-1). - Mohsen Maesumi, Oct 31 2018
Primes p such that p^3 | a(p-1) are the Wolstenholme primes A088164. - Amiram Eldar and Thomas Ordowski, Aug 08 2019
Total number of left-to-right maxima (or minima) in all permutations of [n]. a(3) = 11 = 3+2+2+2+1+1: (1)(2)(3), (1)(3)2, (2)1(3), (2)(3)1, (3)12, (3)21. - Alois P. Heinz, Aug 01 2020
REFERENCES
M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards Applied Math. Series 55, 1964 (and various reprintings), p. 833.
A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, identities 186-190.
N. Bleistein and R. A. Handelsman, Asymptotic Expansions of Integrals, Dover Publications, 1986, see page 2. MR0863284 (89d:41049)
L. Comtet, Advanced Combinatorics, Reidel, 1974, p. 217.
F. N. David, M. G. Kendall and D. E. Barton, Symmetric Function and Allied Tables, Cambridge, 1966, p. 226.
Shanzhen Gao, Permutations with Restricted Structure (in preparation).
K. Javorszky, Natural Orders: De Ordinibus Naturalibus, 2016, ISBN 978-3-99057-139-2.
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).
LINKS
Seiichi Manyama, Table of n, a(n) for n = 0..449 (terms 0..100 from T. D. Noe)
M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards, Applied Math. Series 55, Tenth Printing, 1972 [alternative scanned copy].
E. Barcucci, A. Del Lungo and R. Pinzani, "Deco" polyominoes, permutations and random generation, Theoretical Computer Science, 159 (1996), 29-42.
J.-L. Baril and S. Kirgizov, The pure descent statistic on permutations, preprint, 2016.
FindStat - Combinatorial Statistic Finder, The number of cycles in the cycle decomposition of a permutation.
Sergey Kitaev and Jeffrey Remmel, Simple marked mesh patterns, arXiv:1201.1323 [math.CO], 2012.
Sergey Kitaev and Jeffrey Remmel, Quadrant Marked Mesh Patterns, J. Int. Seq. 15 (2012), #12.4.7.
Chanchal Kumar and Amit Roy, Integer Sequences and Monomial Ideals, arXiv:2003.10098 [math.CO], 2020.
Mircea Merca, Some experiments with complete and elementary symmetric functions, Periodica Mathematica Hungarica, 69 (2014), 182-189.
J. Riordan, Letter of 04/11/74.
John A. Rochowicz Jr., Harmonic Numbers: Insights, Approximations and Applications, Spreadsheets in Education (eJSiE), 8(2) (2015), Article 4.
N. A. Rosenberg, Informativeness of genetic markers for inference of ancestry, American Journal of Human Genetics 73 (2003), 1402-1422.
M. D. Schmidt, Generalized j-Factorial Functions, Polynomials, and Applications, J. Int. Seq. 13 (2010), #10.6.7, Section 4.3.2.
J. Ser, Les Calculs Formels des Séries de Factorielles, Gauthier-Villars, Paris, 1933 [Local copy].
J. Ser, Les Calculs Formels des Séries de Factorielles. (Annotated scans of some selected pages)
Jun Yan, Results on pattern avoidance in parking functions, arXiv:2404.07958 [math.CO], 2024. See p. 5.
FORMULA
Let P(n,X) = (X+1)*(X+2)*(X+3)*...*(X+n); then a(n) is the coefficient of X; or a(n) = P'(n,0). - Benoit Cloitre, May 09 2002
Sum_{k > 0} a(k) * x^k/ k!^2 = exp(x) *(Sum_{k>0} (-1)^(k+1) * x^k / (k * k!)). - Michael Somos, Mar 24 2004; corrected by Warren D. Smith, Feb 12 2006
a(n) is the coefficient of x^(n+2) in (-log(1-x))^2, multiplied by (n+2)!/2.
a(n) = n! * Sum_{i=1..n} 1/i = n! * H(n), where H(n) = A001008(n)/A002805(n) is the n-th harmonic number.
a(n) ~ 2^(1/2)*Pi^(1/2)*log(n)*n^(1/2)*e^-n*n^n. - Joe Keane (jgk(AT)jgk.org), Jun 06 2002
E.g.f.: log(1 - x) / (x-1). (= (log(1 - x))^2 / 2 if offset 1). - Michael Somos, Feb 05 2004
D-finite with recurrence: a(n) = a(n-1) * (2*n - 1) - a(n-2) * (n - 1)^2, if n > 1. - Michael Somos, Mar 24 2004
a(n) = A081358(n)+A092691(n). - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 12 2004
a(n) = n!*Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^(k+1)*binomial(n, k)/k. - Vladeta Jovovic, Jan 29 2005
p^2 divides a(p-1) for prime p > 3. a(n) = (Sum_{i=1..n} 1/i) / Product_{i=1..n} 1/i. - Alexander Adamchuk, Jul 11 2006
a(n) = 3* A001710(n) + 2* A001711(n-3) for n > 2; e.g., 11 = 3*3 + 2*1, 50 = 3*12 + 2*7, 274 = 3*60 + 2*47, ... - Gary Detlefs, May 24 2010
a(n) = A138772(n+1) - A159324(n). - Gary Detlefs, Jul 05 2010
a(n) = A121633(n) + A002672(n). - Gary Detlefs, Jul 18 2010
a(n+1) = Sum_{i=1..floor((n-1)/2)} n!/((n-i)*i) + Sum_{i=ceiling(n/2)..floor(n/2)} n!/(2*(n-i)*i). - Shanzhen Gao, Sep 14 2010
From Gary Detlefs, Sep 11 2010: (Start)
a(n) = (a(n-1)*(n^2 - 2*n + 1) + (n + 1)!)/(n - 1) for n > 2.
It appears that, with the exception of n = 2, (a(n+1)^2 - a(n)^2) mod n^2 = 0 if n is composite and 4*n if n is prime.
It appears that, with the exception of n = 2, (a(n+1)^3 - a(n)^2) mod n = 0 if n is composite and n - 2 if n is prime.
It appears that, with the exception of n = 2, (a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2) mod n = 0 if n is composite and = 2 if n is prime. (End)
a(n) = Integral_{x=0..oo} (x^n - n!)*log(x)*exp(-x) dx. - Groux Roland, Mar 28 2011
a(n) = 3*n!/2 + 2*(n-2)!*Sum_{k=0..n-3} binomial(k+2,2)/(n-2-k) for n >= 2. - Gary Detlefs, Sep 02 2011
a(n)/(n-1)! = ml(n) = n*ml(n-1)/(n-1) + 1 for n > 1, where ml(n) is the average number of random draws from an n-set with replacement until the total set has been observed. G.f. of ml: x*(1 - log(1 - x))/(1 - x)^2. - Paul Weisenhorn, Nov 18 2011
a(n) = det(|S(i+2, j+1)|, 1 <= i,j <= n-2), where S(n,k) are Stirling numbers of the second kind. - Mircea Merca, Apr 06 2013
E.g.f.: x/(1 - x)*E(0)/2, where E(k) = 2 + E(k+1)*x*(k + 1)/(k + 2). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jun 01 2013 [Edited by Michael Somos, Nov 28 2013]
0 = a(n) * (a(n+4) - 6*a(n+3) + 7*a(n+2) - a(n+1)) - a(n+1) * (4*a(n+3) - 6*a(n+2) + a(n+1)) + 3*a(n+2)^2 unless n=0. - Michael Somos, Nov 28 2013
For a simple way to calculate the sequence, multiply n! by the integral from 0 to 1 of (1 - x^n)/(1 - x) dx. - Rahul Jha, Feb 18 2015
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Aug 07 2016: (Start)
Inverse binomial transform of A073596.
a(n) ~ sqrt(2*Pi*n) * n^n * (log(n) + gamma)/exp(n), where gamma is the Euler-Mascheroni constant A001620. (End)
a(n) = ((-1)^(n+1)/2*(n+1))*Sum_{k=1..n} k*Bernoulli(k-1)*Stirling1(n,k). - Vladimir Kruchinin, Nov 20 2016
a(n) = (n)! * (digamma(n+1) + gamma), where gamma is the Euler-Mascheroni constant A001620. - Pedro Caceres, Mar 10 2018
From Andy Nicol, Oct 21 2021: (Start)
Gamma'(x) = a(x-1) - (x-1)!*gamma, where Gamma'(x) is the derivative of the gamma function at positive integers and gamma is the Euler-Mascheroni constant. E.g.:
Gamma'(1) = -gamma, Gamma'(2) = 1-gamma, Gamma'(3) = 3-2*gamma,
Gamma'(22) = 186244810780170240000 - 51090942171709440000*gamma. (End)
From Peter Bala, Feb 03 2022: (Start)
The following are all conjectural:
E.g.f.: for nonzero m, (1/m)*Sum_{n >= 1} (-1)^(n+1)*(1/n)*binomial(m*n,n)* x^n/(1 - x)^(m*n+1) = x + 3*x^2/2! + 11*x^3/3! + 50*x^4/4! + ....
For nonzero m, a(n) = (1/m)*n!*Sum_{k = 1..n} (-1)^(k+1)*(1/k)*binomial(m*k,k)* binomial(n+(m-1)*k,n-k).
a(n)^2 = (1/2)*n!^2*Sum_{k = 1..n} (-1)^(k+1)*(1/k^2)*binomial(n,k)* binomial(n+k,k). (End)
From Mélika Tebni, Jun 20 2022: (Start)
a(n) = -Sum_{k=0..n} k!*A021009(n, k+1).
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} k!*A094587(n, k+1). (End)
a(n) = n! * 1/(1 - 1^2/(3 - 2^2/(5 - 3^2/(7 - ... - (n - 1)^2/((2*n - 1)))))). - Peter Bala, Mar 16 2024
EXAMPLE
(1-x)^-1 * (-log(1-x)) = x + 3/2*x^2 + 11/6*x^3 + 25/12*x^4 + ...
G.f. = x + x^2 + 5*x^3 + 14*x^4 + 94*x^5 + 444*x^6 + 3828*x^7 + 25584*x^8 + ...
MAPLE
A000254 := proc(n) option remember; if n<=1 then n else n*A000254(n-1)+(n-1)!; fi; end: seq(A000254(n), n=0..21);
a := n -> add(n!/k, k=1..n): seq(a(n), n=0..21); # Zerinvary Lajos, Jan 22 2008
MATHEMATICA
Table[ (PolyGamma[ m ]+EulerGamma) (m-1)!, {m, 1, 24} ] (* Wouter Meeussen *)
Table[ n!*HarmonicNumber[n], {n, 0, 19}] (* Robert G. Wilson v, May 21 2005 *)
Table[Sum[1/i, {i, 1, n}]/Product[1/i, {i, 1, n}], {n, 1, 30}] (* Alexander Adamchuk, Jul 11 2006 *)
Abs[StirlingS1[Range[20], 2]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Aug 16 2011 *)
Table[Gamma'[n + 1] /. EulerGamma -> 0, {n, 0, 30}] (* Li Han, Feb 14 2024*)
PROG
(MuPAD) A000254 := proc(n) begin n*A000254(n-1)+fact(n-1) end_proc: A000254(1) := 1:
(PARI) {a(n) = if( n<0, 0, (n+1)! / 2 * sum( k=1, n, 1 / k / (n+1-k)))} /* Michael Somos, Feb 05 2004 */
(Sage) [stirling_number1(i, 2) for i in range(1, 22)] # Zerinvary Lajos, Jun 27 2008
(Maxima)
a(n):=(-1)^(n+1)/2*(n+1)*sum(k*bern(k-1)*stirling1(n, k), k, 1, n); /* Vladimir Kruchinin, Nov 20 2016 */
(Magma) a:=[]; for n in [1..22] do a:=a cat [Abs(StirlingFirst(n, 2))]; end for; a; // Marius A. Burtea, Jan 01 2020
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn,easy,nice
STATUS
approved
a(n) = (2n)!/2.
(Formerly M4879 N2092)
+10
29
1, 12, 360, 20160, 1814400, 239500800, 43589145600, 10461394944000, 3201186852864000, 1216451004088320000, 562000363888803840000, 310224200866619719680000, 201645730563302817792000000, 152444172305856930250752000000, 132626429906095529318154240000000
OFFSET
1,2
COMMENTS
Right side of the binomial sum n-> sum( (-1)^i * (n-i)^(2*n) * binomial(2*n, i), i=0..n). - Yong Kong (ykong(AT)curagen.com), Dec 28 2000
a(n) is the number of ways to display n distinct flags on n distinct poles and then linearly order all (including any empty) poles. - Geoffrey Critzer, Dec 16 2009
Product of the partition parts of 2n into exactly two parts. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 03 2013
Let f(x) be a polynomial in x. The expansion (2*sinh(x/2))^2 = x^2 + (1/12)*x^4 + (1/360)*x^6 + ... leads to the second central difference formula f(x+1) - 2*f(x) + f(x-1) = (2*sinh(D/2))^2(f(x)) = D^2(f(x)) + (1/12)*D^4(f(x)) + (1/360)* D^6(f(x)) + ..., where D denotes the differential operator d/dx. - Peter Bala, Oct 03 2019
REFERENCES
A. P. Prudnikov, Yu. A. Brychkov and O.I. Marichev, "Integrals and Series", Volume 1: "Elementary Functions", Chapter 4: "Finite Sums", New York, Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, 1986-1992, Eq. (4.2.2.33)
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).
LINKS
Ronald P. Nordgren, Compound Lucas Magic Squares, arXiv:2103.04774 [math.GM], 2021. See Table 2 p. 12.
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Central Difference.
FORMULA
4*sinh(x/2)^2 = Sum_{k>=1} x^(2k)/a(k). - Benoit Cloitre, Dec 08 2002
E.g.f.: (hypergeom([1/2, 1], [], 4*x)-1)/2 (cf. A090438).
a(n) = n*(2n-1)!. - Geoffrey Critzer, Dec 16 2009
a(n) = A010050(n)/2. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Aug 22 2013
a(n) = Product_{k=0..n-1} (n^2 - k^2). - Stanislav Sykora, Jul 14 2014
Series reversion ( Sum_{n >= 1} x^n/a(n) ) = Sum_{n >= 1} (-1)^n*x^n/b(n-1), where b(n) = A002544(n). - Peter Bala, Apr 18 2017
From Amiram Eldar, Jul 09 2020: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 2*(cosh(1) - 1).
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 2*(1 - cos(1)). (End)
EXAMPLE
a(3) = 360, since 2(3) = 6 has exactly 3 partitions into two parts: (5,1), (4,2), (3,3). Multiplying all the parts in the partitions, we get 5! * 3 = 360. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 03 2013
MAPLE
seq((2*k)!/2, k=1..20); # Wesley Ivan Hurt, Aug 22 2013
MATHEMATICA
Table[n! Pochhammer[n, n], {n, 0, 10}] (* Geoffrey Critzer, Dec 16 2009 *)
Table[(2 n)! / 2, {n, 1, 15}] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 23 2013 *)
PROG
(Magma) [n*Factorial(2*n-1): n in [1..15]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 23 2013
(PARI) a(n) = (2*n)!/2; \\ Indranil Ghosh, Apr 18 2017
CROSSREFS
a(n) = A090438(n, 2), n >= 1 (first column of (4, 2)-Stirling2 array).
KEYWORD
nonn,easy
STATUS
approved
a(n) = 4^n*(2*n+1)!.
(Formerly M5174 N2246)
+10
16
1, 24, 1920, 322560, 92897280, 40874803200, 25505877196800, 21424936845312000, 23310331287699456000, 31888533201572855808000, 53572735778642397757440000, 108431217215972213061058560000
OFFSET
0,2
COMMENTS
From Sanjar Abrarov, Mar 30 2019: (Start)
There is a formula for numerical integration (see MATLAB Central file ID# 71037):
Integral_{x=0..1} f(x) dx = 2*Sum_{m=1..M} Sum_{n>=0} 1/((2*M)^(2*n + 1)*(2*n + 1)!)*f^(2*n)(x)|_x = (m - 1/2)/M, where the notation f^(2*n)(x)|_x = (m - 1/2)/M is the (2*n)-th derivative of the function f(x) at the points x = (m - 1/2)/M.
When we choose M = 1, then the corresponding coefficients are generated as 2*1/(2^(2*n + 1)*(2*n + 1)!) = 1/(4^n*(2*n + 1)!).
Therefore, this sequence also occurs in the denominator of the numerical integration formula at M = 1. (End)
From Peter Bala, Oct 03 2019: (Start)
Denominators in the expansion of 2*sinh(x/2) = x + x^3/24 + x^5/1920 + x^7/322560 + ....
If f(x) is a polynomial in x then the central difference f(x+1/2) - f(x-1/2) = 2*sinh(D/2)(f(x)) = D(f(x)) + (1/24)*D^3(f(x)) + (1/1920)*D^5(f(x)) + ..., where D denotes the differential operator d/dx. Formulas for higher central differences in terms of powers of the operator D can be obtained from the expansion of powers of the function 2*sinh(x/2). For example, the expansion (2*sinh(x/2))^2 = x^2 + (1/12)*x^4 + (1/360)*x^6 + .. leads to the second central difference formula f(x+1) - 2*f(x) + f(x-1) = D^2(f(x)) + (1/12)*D^4(f(x)) + (1/360)* D^6(f(x)) + .... See A002674. (End)
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).
LINKS
S. M. Abrarov and B. M. Quine, Array numerical integration by enhanced midpoint rule, MATLAB Central file ID #: 71037.
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables. [Note that there is a mistake in the definition of this sequence on line 2 of page 164.]
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Central Difference.
FORMULA
a(n) = 16^n * Pochhammer(1,n) * Pochhammer(3/2,n). - Roger L. Bagula, Apr 26 2013
From Amiram Eldar, Apr 09 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=0} 1/a(n) = 2*sinh(1/2).
Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n/a(n) = 2*sin(1/2). (End)
MATHEMATICA
a[n_] := 4^n*(2*n + 1)!; Array[a, 12, 0] (* Amiram Eldar, Apr 09 2022 *)
PROG
(PARI) a(n)=4^n*(2*n+1)!
CROSSREFS
A bisection of A002866 and (apart from initial term) also a bisection of A007346.
Row sums of A225076. - Roger L. Bagula, Apr 27 2013
KEYWORD
nonn,easy
EXTENSIONS
More terms from Michael Somos
STATUS
approved
Numerators of coefficients for central differences M_{4}^(2*n).
(Formerly M5035 N2173)
+10
10
1, 1, 1, 17, 31, 1, 5461, 257, 73, 1271, 60787, 241, 22369621, 617093, 49981, 16843009, 5726623061, 7957, 91625968981, 61681, 231927781, 50991843607, 499069107643, 4043309297, 1100586419201, 5664905191661, 1672180312771
OFFSET
2,4
COMMENTS
From Peter Bala, Oct 03 2019: (Start)
Numerators in the expansion of (2*sinh(x/2))^4 = x^4 + (1/6)*x^6 + (1/80)*x^8 + (17/30240)*x^10 + ....
Let f(x) be a polynomial in x. The expansion of (2*sinh(x/2))^4 leads to a formula for the fourth central differences: f(x+2) - 4*f(x+1) + 6*f(x) - 4*f(x-1) + f(x-2) = (2*sinh(D/2))^4(f(x)) = D^4(f(x)) + (1/6)*D^6(f(x)) + (1/80)* D^8(f(x)) + (17/30240)*D^10(f(x)) + ..., where D denotes the differential operator d/dx. (End)
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).
LINKS
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
E. W. Weisstein, Central Difference. From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.
MAPLE
gf := (sinh(2*sqrt(x)) - 2*sinh(sqrt(x)))*sqrt(x):
ser := series(gf, x, 40): seq(numer(coeff(ser, x, n)), n=2..28); # Peter Luschny, Oct 05 2019
CROSSREFS
Cf. A002676 and A002677 (two different choices for denominators).
Also equals A002430/A002431.
KEYWORD
nonn,frac
EXTENSIONS
More terms from Sean A. Irvine, Dec 20 2016
STATUS
approved
Denominators of coefficients for central differences M_{3}'^(2*n+1).
(Formerly M3676 N1499)
+10
10
1, 4, 40, 12096, 604800, 760320, 217945728000, 697426329600, 16937496576000, 30964207376793600, 187333454629601280000, 111407096483020800000, 1814811575069725360128000000, 10162944820390462016716800000
OFFSET
1,2
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).
LINKS
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
FORMULA
From Peter Bala, Oct 03 2019: (Start)
a(n) are the denominators in the expansion of (1/2)*(d/dx)(2*sinh(sqrt(x)/2))^4 =
x + (1/4)*x^2 + (1/40)*x^3 + (17/12096)*x^4 + (31/604800)*x^5 + ...
The a(n) also appear as denominators in the difference formula: (1/2)*f(x+2) - f(x+1) + f(x-1) - (1/2)*f(x-2) = D^3(f(x)) + (1/4)*D^5(f(x)) + (1/40)*D^7(f(x)) + (17/12096)*D^9(f(x)) + ..., where D denotes the differential operator d/dx.
(End)
MAPLE
gf := (sinh(2*sqrt(x)) - 2*sinh(sqrt(x)))/sqrt(x): ser := series(gf, x, 20):
seq(denom(coeff(ser, x, n)), n=1..14); # Peter Luschny, Oct 05 2019
CROSSREFS
Numerators are A002675.
KEYWORD
nonn,frac
EXTENSIONS
More terms from Sean A. Irvine, Dec 20 2016
STATUS
approved
Numerators of central difference coefficients M_{3}^(2n+1).
(Formerly M4894 N2097)
+10
9
1, 1, 13, 41, 671, 73, 597871, 7913, 28009, 792451, 170549237, 19397633, 317733228541, 9860686403, 75397891, 170314355593, 2084647712458321, 29327731093, 168856464709124011, 3063310184201, 499338236699611, 535201577273701757, 23571643935246013553
OFFSET
1,3
COMMENTS
From Peter Bala, Oct 03 2019: (Start)
Numerators in the expansion of (2*sinh(x/2))^3 = x^3 + (1/8)*x^5 + (13/1920)*x^7 + (41/193536)*x^9 + ....
Let f(x) be a polynomial in x. The expansion of (2*sinh(x/2))^3 leads to a formula for the third central differences: f(x+3/2) - 3*f(x+1/2) + 3*f(x-1/2) - f(x-3/2) = (2*sinh(D/2))^3(f(x)) = D^3(f(x)) + (1/8)*D^5(f(x)) + (13/1920)* D^7(f(x)) + ..., where D denotes the differential operator d/dx. (End)
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).
LINKS
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
E. W. Weisstein, Central Difference. From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.
KEYWORD
nonn,frac
STATUS
approved
Denominators of coefficients for central differences M_{4}^(2*n).
(Formerly M4282 N1789)
+10
6
1, 6, 80, 30240, 1814400, 2661120, 871782912000, 3138418483200, 84687482880000, 170303140572364800, 1124000727777607680000, 724146127139635200000, 12703681025488077520896000000, 76222086152928465125376000000, 1531041037877004667453440000000
OFFSET
2,2
COMMENTS
From Peter Bala, Oct 03 2019: (Start)
Denominators in the expansion of (2*sinh(x/2))^4 = x^4 + (1/6)*x^6 + (1/80)*x^8 + (17/30240)*x^10 + ....
Let f(x) be a polynomial in x. The expansion of (2*sinh(x/2))^4 leads to a formula for the fourth central differences: f(x+2) - 4*f(x+1) + 6*f(x) - 4*f(x-1) + f(x-2) = (2*sinh(D/2))^4(f(x)) = D^4(f(x)) + (1/6)*D^6(f(x)) + (1/80)*D^8(f(x)) + (17/30240)*D^10(f(x)) + ..., where D denotes the differential operator d/dx. (End)
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).
LINKS
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
E. W. Weisstein, Central Difference. From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.
FORMULA
a(n) = denominator(4! * m(4, 2 * n) / (2 * n)!) where m(k, q) is defined in A002672. - Sean A. Irvine, Dec 20 2016
MAPLE
gf := 6 - 8*cosh(sqrt(x)) + 2*cosh(2*sqrt(x)): ser := series(gf, x, 40):
seq(denom(coeff(ser, x, n)), n=2..16); # Peter Luschny, Oct 05 2019
CROSSREFS
Cf. A002675 (numerators). Cf. A002671, A002672, A002673, A002674, A002677.
KEYWORD
nonn,frac
EXTENSIONS
More terms from Sean A. Irvine, Dec 20 2016
STATUS
approved
Sum of the bottom levels of the last column over all deco polyominoes of height n. A deco polyomino is a directed column-convex polyomino in which the height, measured along the diagonal, is attained only in the last column.
+10
4
0, 0, 1, 9, 68, 527, 4408, 40303, 403046, 4393339, 51955528, 663383135, 9102982354, 133668773755, 2092209897524, 34783032728383, 612234346270510, 11375905660965179, 222544581264066400, 4572536725690159999, 98456173247669999978, 2217126753620449439515
OFFSET
1,4
COMMENTS
a(n) = Sum(k*A121632(n,k), k>=0).
REFERENCES
E. Barcucci, A. Del Lungo and R. Pinzani, "Deco" polyominoes, permutations and random generation, Theoretical Computer Science, 159, 1996, 29-42.
LINKS
FORMULA
a(1)=0; a(n) = n*a(n-1)+(n-1)!-1 for n>=2.
a(n)= A000254(n)- A002672(n) a(n)= n!*sum(1/k,k=1..10)- floor(n!(e-1)) [From Gary Detlefs, Jul 18 2010]
D-finite with recurrence a(n) +(-2*n-1)*a(n-1) +(n^2+2*n-4)*a(n-2) +(-2*n^2+6*n-3)*a(n-3) +(n-3)^2*a(n-4)=0. - R. J. Mathar, Jul 26 2022
EXAMPLE
a(2)=0 because the deco polyominoes of height 2 are the vertical and horizontal dominoes, all of whose columns start at level 0.
MAPLE
a[1]:=0: for n from 2 to 23 do a[n]:=n*a[n-1]+(n-1)!-1 od: seq(a[n], n=1..23);
MATHEMATICA
RecurrenceTable[{a[1]==0, a[n]==n*a[n-1]+(n-1)!-1}, a, {n, 20}] (* Harvey P. Dale, Dec 01 2013 *)
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn
AUTHOR
Emeric Deutsch, Aug 12 2006
STATUS
approved
Numerators of central difference coefficients M_{5}^(2n+1).
+10
1
1, 5, 23, 227, 631
OFFSET
2,2
COMMENTS
Salzer's table extends to M_{5}^(29).
LINKS
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
CROSSREFS
Cf. 1/A002671, A002673/A002672, A323994 (denominators).
KEYWORD
nonn,frac,more
AUTHOR
N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 14 2019
STATUS
approved
Denominators of central difference coefficients M_{5}^(2n+1).
+10
1
1, 24, 1152, 193536, 13271040
OFFSET
2,2
COMMENTS
Salzer's table extends to M_{5}^(29).
LINKS
H. E. Salzer, Tables of coefficients for obtaining central differences from the derivatives, Journal of Mathematics and Physics (this journal is also called Studies in Applied Mathematics), 42 (1963), 162-165, plus several inserted tables.
CROSSREFS
Cf. 1/A002671, A002673/A002672, A323993 (numerators).
KEYWORD
nonn,frac,more
AUTHOR
N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 14 2019
STATUS
approved

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