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Fibonacci polynomials

In mathematics, the Fibonacci polynomials are a polynomial sequence which can be considered as a generalization of the Fibonacci numbers. The polynomials generated in a similar way from the Lucas numbers are called Lucas polynomials.

Definition Edit

These Fibonacci polynomials are defined by a recurrence relation:[1]

 

The Lucas polynomials use the same recurrence with different starting values:[2]

 

They can be defined for negative indices by[3]

 
 

The Fibonacci polynomials form a sequence of orthogonal polynomials with   and  .

Examples Edit

The first few Fibonacci polynomials are:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The first few Lucas polynomials are:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Properties Edit

  • The degree of Fn is n − 1 and the degree of Ln is n.
  • The Fibonacci and Lucas numbers are recovered by evaluating the polynomials at x = 1; Pell numbers are recovered by evaluating Fn at x = 2.
  • The ordinary generating functions for the sequences are:[4]
     
     
  • The polynomials can be expressed in terms of Lucas sequences as
     
     
  • They can also be expressed in terms of Chebyshev polynomials   and   as
     
     
where   is the imaginary unit.

Identities Edit

As particular cases of Lucas sequences, Fibonacci polynomials satisfy a number of identities, such as[3]

 
 
 
 

Closed form expressions, similar to Binet's formula are:[3]

 

where

 

are the solutions (in t) of

 

For Lucas Polynomials n > 0, we have

 

A relationship between the Fibonacci polynomials and the standard basis polynomials is given by[5]

 

For example,

 
 
 
 

Combinatorial interpretation Edit

 
The coefficients of the Fibonacci polynomials can be read off from a left-justified Pascal's triangle following the diagonals (shown in red). The sums of the coefficients are the Fibonacci numbers.

If F(n,k) is the coefficient of xk in Fn(x), namely

 

then F(n,k) is the number of ways an n−1 by 1 rectangle can be tiled with 2 by 1 dominoes and 1 by 1 squares so that exactly k squares are used.[1] Equivalently, F(n,k) is the number of ways of writing n−1 as an ordered sum involving only 1 and 2, so that 1 is used exactly k times. For example F(6,3)=4 and 5 can be written in 4 ways, 1+1+1+2, 1+1+2+1, 1+2+1+1, 2+1+1+1, as a sum involving only 1 and 2 with 1 used 3 times. By counting the number of times 1 and 2 are both used in such a sum, it is evident that  

This gives a way of reading the coefficients from Pascal's triangle as shown on the right.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Benjamin & Quinn p. 141
  2. ^ Benjamin & Quinn p. 142
  3. ^ a b c Springer
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Fibonacci Polynomial". MathWorld.
  5. ^ A proof starts from page 5 in .

Further reading Edit

  • Hoggatt, V. E.; Bicknell, Marjorie (1973). "Roots of Fibonacci polynomials". Fibonacci Quarterly. 11: 271–274. ISSN 0015-0517. MR 0332645.
  • Hoggatt, V. E.; Long, Calvin T. (1974). "Divisibility properties of generalized Fibonacci Polynomials". Fibonacci Quarterly. 12: 113. MR 0352034.
  • Ricci, Paolo Emilio (1995). "Generalized Lucas polynomials and Fibonacci polynomials". Rivista di Matematica della Università di Parma. V. Ser. 4: 137–146. MR 1395332.
  • Yuan, Yi; Zhang, Wenpeng (2002). "Some identities involving the Fibonacci Polynomials". Fibonacci Quarterly. 40 (4): 314. MR 1920571.
  • Cigler, Johann (2003). "q-Fibonacci polynomials". Fibonacci Quarterly (41): 31–40. MR 1962279.

External links Edit

  • OEIS sequence A162515 (Triangle of coefficients of polynomials defined by Binet form)
  • OEIS sequence A011973 (Triangle of coefficients of Fibonacci polynomials)

fibonacci, polynomials, mathematics, polynomial, sequence, which, considered, generalization, fibonacci, numbers, polynomials, generated, similar, from, lucas, numbers, called, lucas, polynomials, contents, definition, examples, properties, identities, combina. In mathematics the Fibonacci polynomials are a polynomial sequence which can be considered as a generalization of the Fibonacci numbers The polynomials generated in a similar way from the Lucas numbers are called Lucas polynomials Contents 1 Definition 2 Examples 3 Properties 4 Identities 5 Combinatorial interpretation 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDefinition EditThese Fibonacci polynomials are defined by a recurrence relation 1 F n x 0 if n 0 1 if n 1 x F n 1 x F n 2 x if n 2 displaystyle F n x begin cases 0 amp mbox if n 0 1 amp mbox if n 1 xF n 1 x F n 2 x amp mbox if n geq 2 end cases The Lucas polynomials use the same recurrence with different starting values 2 L n x 2 if n 0 x if n 1 x L n 1 x L n 2 x if n 2 displaystyle L n x begin cases 2 amp mbox if n 0 x amp mbox if n 1 xL n 1 x L n 2 x amp mbox if n geq 2 end cases They can be defined for negative indices by 3 F n x 1 n 1 F n x displaystyle F n x 1 n 1 F n x L n x 1 n L n x displaystyle L n x 1 n L n x The Fibonacci polynomials form a sequence of orthogonal polynomials with A n C n 1 displaystyle A n C n 1 and B n 0 displaystyle B n 0 Examples EditThe first few Fibonacci polynomials are F 0 x 0 displaystyle F 0 x 0 F 1 x 1 displaystyle F 1 x 1 F 2 x x displaystyle F 2 x x F 3 x x 2 1 displaystyle F 3 x x 2 1 F 4 x x 3 2 x displaystyle F 4 x x 3 2x F 5 x x 4 3 x 2 1 displaystyle F 5 x x 4 3x 2 1 F 6 x x 5 4 x 3 3 x displaystyle F 6 x x 5 4x 3 3x The first few Lucas polynomials are L 0 x 2 displaystyle L 0 x 2 L 1 x x displaystyle L 1 x x L 2 x x 2 2 displaystyle L 2 x x 2 2 L 3 x x 3 3 x displaystyle L 3 x x 3 3x L 4 x x 4 4 x 2 2 displaystyle L 4 x x 4 4x 2 2 L 5 x x 5 5 x 3 5 x displaystyle L 5 x x 5 5x 3 5x L 6 x x 6 6 x 4 9 x 2 2 displaystyle L 6 x x 6 6x 4 9x 2 2 Properties EditThe degree of Fn is n 1 and the degree of Ln is n The Fibonacci and Lucas numbers are recovered by evaluating the polynomials at x 1 Pell numbers are recovered by evaluating Fn at x 2 The ordinary generating functions for the sequences are 4 n 0 F n x t n t 1 x t t 2 displaystyle sum n 0 infty F n x t n frac t 1 xt t 2 n 0 L n x t n 2 x t 1 x t t 2 displaystyle sum n 0 infty L n x t n frac 2 xt 1 xt t 2 The polynomials can be expressed in terms of Lucas sequences as F n x U n x 1 displaystyle F n x U n x 1 L n x V n x 1 displaystyle L n x V n x 1 They can also be expressed in terms of Chebyshev polynomials T n x displaystyle mathcal T n x and U n x displaystyle mathcal U n x as F n x i n 1 U n 1 i x 2 displaystyle F n x i n 1 cdot mathcal U n 1 tfrac ix 2 L n x 2 i n T n i x 2 displaystyle L n x 2 cdot i n cdot mathcal T n tfrac ix 2 where i displaystyle i is the imaginary unit Identities EditMain article Lucas sequence As particular cases of Lucas sequences Fibonacci polynomials satisfy a number of identities such as 3 F m n x F m 1 x F n x F m x F n 1 x displaystyle F m n x F m 1 x F n x F m x F n 1 x L m n x L m x L n x 1 n L m n x displaystyle L m n x L m x L n x 1 n L m n x F n 1 x F n 1 x F n x 2 1 n displaystyle F n 1 x F n 1 x F n x 2 1 n F 2 n x F n x L n x displaystyle F 2n x F n x L n x Closed form expressions similar to Binet s formula are 3 F n x a x n b x n a x b x L n x a x n b x n displaystyle F n x frac alpha x n beta x n alpha x beta x L n x alpha x n beta x n where a x x x 2 4 2 b x x x 2 4 2 displaystyle alpha x frac x sqrt x 2 4 2 beta x frac x sqrt x 2 4 2 are the solutions in t of t 2 x t 1 0 displaystyle t 2 xt 1 0 For Lucas Polynomials n gt 0 we have L n x k 0 n 2 n n k n k k x n 2 k displaystyle L n x sum k 0 lfloor n 2 rfloor frac n n k binom n k k x n 2k A relationship between the Fibonacci polynomials and the standard basis polynomials is given by 5 x n F n 1 x k 1 n 2 1 k n k n k 1 F n 1 2 k x displaystyle x n F n 1 x sum k 1 lfloor n 2 rfloor 1 k left binom n k binom n k 1 right F n 1 2k x For example x 4 F 5 x 3 F 3 x 2 F 1 x displaystyle x 4 F 5 x 3F 3 x 2F 1 x x 5 F 6 x 4 F 4 x 5 F 2 x displaystyle x 5 F 6 x 4F 4 x 5F 2 x x 6 F 7 x 5 F 5 x 9 F 3 x 5 F 1 x displaystyle x 6 F 7 x 5F 5 x 9F 3 x 5F 1 x x 7 F 8 x 6 F 6 x 14 F 4 x 14 F 2 x displaystyle x 7 F 8 x 6F 6 x 14F 4 x 14F 2 x Combinatorial interpretation Edit The coefficients of the Fibonacci polynomials can be read off from a left justified Pascal s triangle following the diagonals shown in red The sums of the coefficients are the Fibonacci numbers If F n k is the coefficient of xk in Fn x namely F n x k 0 n F n k x k displaystyle F n x sum k 0 n F n k x k then F n k is the number of ways an n 1 by 1 rectangle can be tiled with 2 by 1 dominoes and 1 by 1 squares so that exactly k squares are used 1 Equivalently F n k is the number of ways of writing n 1 as an ordered sum involving only 1 and 2 so that 1 is used exactly k times For example F 6 3 4 and 5 can be written in 4 ways 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 as a sum involving only 1 and 2 with 1 used 3 times By counting the number of times 1 and 2 are both used in such a sum it is evident that F n k 1 2 n k 1 k if n k mod 2 0 else displaystyle F n k begin cases displaystyle binom frac 1 2 n k 1 k amp text if n not equiv k pmod 2 12pt 0 amp text else end cases This gives a way of reading the coefficients from Pascal s triangle as shown on the right References Edit a b Benjamin amp Quinn p 141 Benjamin amp Quinn p 142 a b c Springer Weisstein Eric W Fibonacci Polynomial MathWorld A proof starts from page 5 in Algebra Solutions Packet no author Benjamin Arthur T Quinn Jennifer J 2003 Fibonacci and Lucas Polynomial Proofs that Really Count The Art of Combinatorial Proof Dolciani Mathematical Expositions Vol 27 Mathematical Association of America p 141 ISBN 978 0 88385 333 7 Philippou Andreas N 2001 1994 Fibonacci polynomials Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Philippou Andreas N 2001 1994 Lucas polynomials Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Weisstein Eric W Lucas Polynomial MathWorld Jin Z On the Lucas polynomials and some of their new identities Advances in Differential Equations 2018 126 2018 https doi org 10 1186 s13662 018 1527 9Further reading EditHoggatt V E Bicknell Marjorie 1973 Roots of Fibonacci polynomials Fibonacci Quarterly 11 271 274 ISSN 0015 0517 MR 0332645 Hoggatt V E Long Calvin T 1974 Divisibility properties of generalized Fibonacci Polynomials Fibonacci Quarterly 12 113 MR 0352034 Ricci Paolo Emilio 1995 Generalized Lucas polynomials and Fibonacci polynomials Rivista di Matematica della Universita di Parma V Ser 4 137 146 MR 1395332 Yuan Yi Zhang Wenpeng 2002 Some identities involving the Fibonacci Polynomials Fibonacci Quarterly 40 4 314 MR 1920571 Cigler Johann 2003 q Fibonacci polynomials Fibonacci Quarterly 41 31 40 MR 1962279 External links EditOEIS sequence A162515 Triangle of coefficients of polynomials defined by Binet form OEIS sequence A011973 Triangle of coefficients of Fibonacci polynomials Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fibonacci polynomials amp oldid 1153086361, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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