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Gregory coefficients

Gregory coefficients Gn, also known as reciprocal logarithmic numbers, Bernoulli numbers of the second kind, or Cauchy numbers of the first kind,[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] are the rational numbers that occur in the Maclaurin series expansion of the reciprocal logarithm

Gregory coefficients are alternating Gn = (−1)n−1|Gn| for n > 0 and decreasing in absolute value. These numbers are named after James Gregory who introduced them in 1670 in the numerical integration context. They were subsequently rediscovered by many mathematicians and often appear in works of modern authors, who do not always recognize them.[1][5][14][15][16][17]

Numerical values edit

n 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ... OEIS sequences
Gn +1/2 1/12 +1/24 19/720 +3/160 863/60480 +275/24192 33953/3628800 +8183/1036800 3250433/479001600 +4671/788480 ... OEISA002206 (numerators),

OEISA002207 (denominators)

Computation and representations edit

The simplest way to compute Gregory coefficients is to use the recurrence formula

 

with G1 = 1/2.[14][18] Gregory coefficients may be also computed explicitly via the following differential

 

or the integral

 

which can be proved by integrating   between 0 and 1 with respect to  , once directly and the second time using the binomial series expansion first.

It implies the finite summation formula

 

where s(n,) are the signed Stirling numbers of the first kind.

and Schröder's integral formula[19][20]

 

Bounds and asymptotic behavior edit

The Gregory coefficients satisfy the bounds

 

given by Johan Steffensen.[15] These bounds were later improved by various authors. The best known bounds for them were given by Blagouchine.[17] In particular,

 

Asymptotically, at large index n, these numbers behave as[2][17][19]

 

More accurate description of Gn at large n may be found in works of Van Veen,[18] Davis,[3] Coffey,[21] Nemes[6] and Blagouchine.[17]

Series with Gregory coefficients edit

Series involving Gregory coefficients may be often calculated in a closed-form. Basic series with these numbers include

 

where γ = 0.5772156649... is Euler's constant. These results are very old, and their history may be traced back to the works of Gregorio Fontana and Lorenzo Mascheroni.[17][22] More complicated series with the Gregory coefficients were calculated by various authors. Kowalenko,[8] Alabdulmohsin [10][11] and some other authors calculated

 

Alabdulmohsin[10][11] also gives these identities with

 

Candelperger, Coppo[23][24] and Young[7] showed that

 

where Hn are the harmonic numbers. Blagouchine[17][25][26][27] provides the following identities

 

where li(z) is the integral logarithm and   is the binomial coefficient. It is also known that the zeta function, the gamma function, the polygamma functions, the Stieltjes constants and many other special functions and constants may be expressed in terms of infinite series containing these numbers.[1][17][18][28][29]

Generalizations edit

Various generalizations are possible for the Gregory coefficients. Many of them may be obtained by modifying the parent generating equation. For example, Van Veen[18] consider

 

and hence

 

Equivalent generalizations were later proposed by Kowalenko[9] and Rubinstein.[30] In a similar manner, Gregory coefficients are related to the generalized Bernoulli numbers

 

see,[18][28] so that

 

Jordan[1][16][31] defines polynomials ψn(s) such that

 

and call them Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind. From the above, it is clear that Gn = ψn(0). Carlitz[16] generalized Jordan's polynomials ψn(s) by introducing polynomials β

 

and therefore

 

Blagouchine[17][32] introduced numbers Gn(k) such that

 

obtained their generating function and studied their asymptotics at large n. Clearly, Gn = Gn(1). These numbers are strictly alternating Gn(k) = (-1)n-1|Gn(k)| and involved in various expansions for the zeta-functions, Euler's constant and polygamma functions. A different generalization of the same kind was also proposed by Komatsu[31]

 

so that Gn = cn(1)/n! Numbers cn(k) are called by the author poly-Cauchy numbers.[31] Coffey[21] defines polynomials

 

and therefore |Gn| = Pn+1(1).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Ch. Jordan. The Calculus of Finite Differences Chelsea Publishing Company, USA, 1947.
  2. ^ a b L. Comtet. Advanced combinatorics (2nd Edn.) D. Reidel Publishing Company, Boston, USA, 1974.
  3. ^ a b H.T. Davis. The approximation of logarithmic numbers. Amer. Math. Monthly, vol. 64, no. 8, pp. 11–18, 1957.
  4. ^ P. C. Stamper. Table of Gregory coefficients. Math. Comp. vol. 20, p. 465, 1966.
  5. ^ a b D. Merlini, R. Sprugnoli, M. C. Verri. The Cauchy numbers. Discrete Math., vol. 306, pp. 1906–1920, 2006.
  6. ^ a b G. Nemes. An asymptotic expansion for the Bernoulli numbers of the second kind. J. Integer Seq, vol. 14, 11.4.8, 2011
  7. ^ a b P.T. Young. A 2-adic formula for Bernoulli numbers of the second kind and for the Nörlund numbers. J. Number Theory, vol. 128, pp. 2951–2962, 2008.
  8. ^ a b V. Kowalenko. Properties and Applications of the Reciprocal Logarithm Numbers. Acta Appl. Math., vol. 109, pp. 413–437, 2010.
  9. ^ a b V. Kowalenko. Generalizing the reciprocal logarithm numbers by adapting the partition method for a power series expansion. Acta Appl. Math., vol. 106, pp. 369–420, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c I. M. Alabdulmohsin. Summability calculus, arXiv:1209.5739, 2012.
  11. ^ a b c I. M. Alabdulmohsin. Summability calculus: a Comprehensive Theory of Fractional Finite Sums, Springer International Publishing, 2018.
  12. ^ F. Qi and X.-J. Zhang An integral representation, some inequalities, and complete monotonicity of Bernoulli numbers of the second kind. Bull. Korean Math. Soc., vol. 52, no. 3, pp. 987–98, 2015.
  13. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Logarithmic Number." From MathWorld—A Wolfram Web Resource.
  14. ^ a b J. C. Kluyver. Euler's constant and natural numbers. Proc. K. Ned. Akad. Wet., vol. 27(1-2), 1924.
  15. ^ a b J.F. Steffensen. Interpolation (2nd Edn.). Chelsea Publishing Company, New York, USA, 1950.
  16. ^ a b c L. Carlitz. A note on Bernoulli and Euler polynomials of the second kind. Scripta Math., vol. 25, pp. 323–330,1961.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h Ia.V. Blagouchine. Two series expansions for the logarithm of the gamma function involving Stirling numbers and containing only rational coefficients for certain arguments related to π−1. J.Math. Anal. Appl., 2015.
  18. ^ a b c d e S.C. Van Veen. Asymptotic expansion of the generalized Bernoulli numbers Bn(n − 1) for large values of n (n integer). Indag. Math. (Proc.), vol. 13, pp. 335–341, 1951.
  19. ^ a b I. V. Blagouchine, A Note on Some Recent Results for the Bernoulli Numbers of the Second Kind, Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 20, No. 3 (2017), Article 17.3.8 arXiv:1612.03292
  20. ^ Ernst Schröder, Zeitschrift fur Mathematik und Physik, vol. 25, pp. 106–117 (1880)
  21. ^ a b M.W. Coffey. Series representations for the Stieltjes constants. Rocky Mountain J. Math., vol. 44, pp. 443–477, 2014.
  22. ^ Ia.V. Blagouchine. A theorem for the closed-form evaluation of the first generalized Stieltjes constant at rational arguments and some related summations J. Number Theory, vol. 148, pp. 537–592 and vol. 151, pp. 276–277, 2015.
  23. ^ B. Candelpergher and M.-A. Coppo. A new class of identities involving Cauchy numbers, harmonic numbers and zeta values. Ramanujan J., vol. 27, pp. 305–328, 2012.
  24. ^ B. Candelpergher and M.-A. Coppo. A new class of identities involving Cauchy numbers, harmonic numbers and zeta values. Ramanujan J., vol. 27, pp. 305–328, 2012
  25. ^ OEISA269330
  26. ^ OEISA270857
  27. ^ OEISA270859
  28. ^ a b N. Nörlund. Vorlesungen über Differenzenrechnung. Springer, Berlin, 1924.
  29. ^ Ia.V. Blagouchine. Expansions of generalized Euler's constants into the series of polynomials in π−2 and into the formal enveloping series with rational coefficients only J. Number Theory, vol. 158, pp. 365–396, 2016.
  30. ^ M. O. Rubinstein. Identities for the Riemann zeta function Ramanujan J., vol. 27, pp. 29–42, 2012.
  31. ^ a b c Takao Komatsu. On poly-Cauchy numbers and polynomials, 2012.
  32. ^ Ia.V. Blagouchine. Three Notes on Ser's and Hasse's Representations for the Zeta-functions Integers (Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory), vol. 18A, Article #A3, pp. 1–45, 2018. arXiv:1606.02044

gregory, coefficients, also, known, reciprocal, logarithmic, numbers, bernoulli, numbers, second, kind, cauchy, numbers, first, kind, rational, numbers, that, occur, maclaurin, series, expansion, reciprocal, logarithm, 60480, displaystyle, begin, aligned, frac. Gregory coefficients Gn also known as reciprocal logarithmic numbers Bernoulli numbers of the second kind or Cauchy numbers of the first kind 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 are the rational numbers that occur in the Maclaurin series expansion of the reciprocal logarithm z ln 1 z 1 1 2 z 1 12 z 2 1 24 z 3 19 720 z 4 3 160 z 5 863 60480 z 6 1 n 1 G n z n z lt 1 displaystyle begin aligned frac z ln 1 z amp 1 frac 1 2 z frac 1 12 z 2 frac 1 24 z 3 frac 19 720 z 4 frac 3 160 z 5 frac 863 60480 z 6 cdots amp 1 sum n 1 infty G n z n qquad z lt 1 end aligned Gregory coefficients are alternating Gn 1 n 1 Gn for n gt 0 and decreasing in absolute value These numbers are named after James Gregory who introduced them in 1670 in the numerical integration context They were subsequently rediscovered by many mathematicians and often appear in works of modern authors who do not always recognize them 1 5 14 15 16 17 Contents 1 Numerical values 2 Computation and representations 3 Bounds and asymptotic behavior 4 Series with Gregory coefficients 5 Generalizations 6 See also 7 ReferencesNumerical values editn 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 OEIS sequences Gn 1 2 1 12 1 24 19 720 3 160 863 60480 275 24192 33953 3628800 8183 1036800 3250433 479001600 4671 788480 OEIS A002206 numerators OEIS A002207 denominators Computation and representations editThe simplest way to compute Gregory coefficients is to use the recurrence formula G n k 1 n 1 G k n 1 k 1 n 1 displaystyle G n sum k 1 n 1 frac G k n 1 k frac 1 n 1 nbsp with G1 1 2 14 18 Gregory coefficients may be also computed explicitly via the following differential n G n d n d z n z ln 1 z z 0 displaystyle n G n left frac textrm d n textrm d z n frac z ln 1 z right z 0 nbsp or the integral G n 1 n 0 1 x x 1 x 2 x n 1 d x 0 1 x n d x displaystyle G n frac 1 n int 0 1 x x 1 x 2 cdots x n 1 dx int 0 1 binom x n dx nbsp which can be proved by integrating 1 z x displaystyle 1 z x nbsp between 0 and 1 with respect to x displaystyle x nbsp once directly and the second time using the binomial series expansion first It implies the finite summation formula n G n ℓ 0 n s n ℓ ℓ 1 displaystyle n G n sum ell 0 n frac s n ell ell 1 nbsp where s n ℓ are the signed Stirling numbers of the first kind and Schroder s integral formula 19 20 G n 1 n 1 0 d x 1 x n ln 2 x p 2 displaystyle G n 1 n 1 int 0 infty frac dx 1 x n ln 2 x pi 2 nbsp Bounds and asymptotic behavior editThe Gregory coefficients satisfy the bounds 1 6 n n 1 lt G n lt 1 6 n n gt 2 displaystyle frac 1 6n n 1 lt big G n big lt frac 1 6n qquad n gt 2 nbsp given by Johan Steffensen 15 These bounds were later improved by various authors The best known bounds for them were given by Blagouchine 17 In particular 1 n ln 2 n 2 n ln 3 n G n 1 n ln 2 n 2 g n ln 3 n n 5 displaystyle frac 1 n ln 2 n frac 2 n ln 3 n leqslant big G n big leqslant frac 1 n ln 2 n frac 2 gamma n ln 3 n qquad quad n geqslant 5 nbsp Asymptotically at large index n these numbers behave as 2 17 19 G n 1 n ln 2 n n displaystyle big G n big sim frac 1 n ln 2 n qquad n to infty nbsp More accurate description of Gn at large n may be found in works of Van Veen 18 Davis 3 Coffey 21 Nemes 6 and Blagouchine 17 Series with Gregory coefficients editSeries involving Gregory coefficients may be often calculated in a closed form Basic series with these numbers include n 1 G n 1 n 1 G n 1 ln 2 1 n 1 G n n g displaystyle begin aligned amp sum n 1 infty big G n big 1 2mm amp sum n 1 infty G n frac 1 ln 2 1 2mm amp sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n gamma end aligned nbsp where g 0 5772156649 is Euler s constant These results are very old and their history may be traced back to the works of Gregorio Fontana and Lorenzo Mascheroni 17 22 More complicated series with the Gregory coefficients were calculated by various authors Kowalenko 8 Alabdulmohsin 10 11 and some other authors calculated n 2 G n n 1 1 2 ln 2 p 2 g 2 n 1 G n n 1 1 ln 2 displaystyle begin array l displaystyle sum n 2 infty frac big G n big n 1 frac 1 2 frac ln 2 pi 2 frac gamma 2 6mm displaystyle displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n 1 1 ln 2 end array nbsp Alabdulmohsin 10 11 also gives these identities with n 0 1 n G 3 n 1 G 3 n 2 3 p n 0 1 n G 3 n 2 G 3 n 3 2 3 p 1 n 0 1 n G 3 n 3 G 3 n 4 1 2 3 p displaystyle begin aligned amp sum n 0 infty 1 n big G 3n 1 big big G 3n 2 big frac sqrt 3 pi 2mm amp sum n 0 infty 1 n big G 3n 2 big big G 3n 3 big frac 2 sqrt 3 pi 1 2mm amp sum n 0 infty 1 n big G 3n 3 big big G 3n 4 big frac 1 2 frac sqrt 3 pi end aligned nbsp Candelperger Coppo 23 24 and Young 7 showed that n 1 G n H n n p 2 6 1 displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac big G n big cdot H n n frac pi 2 6 1 nbsp where Hn are the harmonic numbers Blagouchine 17 25 26 27 provides the following identities n 1 G n n li 2 g n 3 G n n 2 1 8 ln 2 p 12 z 2 2 p 2 n 4 G n n 3 1 16 ln 2 p 24 z 2 4 p 2 z 3 8 p 2 n 1 G n n 2 1 2 2 ln 2 ln 3 n 1 G n n 3 1 3 5 ln 2 3 ln 3 n 1 G n n k 1 k m 1 k 1 m k m ln m 1 k 1 2 3 n 1 G n n 2 0 1 li 1 x g ln x x d x n 1 G n n 2 0 1 li 1 x g ln x x d x displaystyle begin aligned amp sum n 1 infty frac G n n operatorname li 2 gamma 2mm amp sum n 3 infty frac big G n big n 2 frac 1 8 frac ln 2 pi 12 frac zeta 2 2 pi 2 2mm amp sum n 4 infty frac big G n big n 3 frac 1 16 frac ln 2 pi 24 frac zeta 2 4 pi 2 frac zeta 3 8 pi 2 2mm amp sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n 2 frac 1 2 2 ln 2 ln 3 2mm amp sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n 3 frac 1 3 5 ln 2 3 ln 3 2mm amp sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n k frac 1 k sum m 1 k 1 m binom k m ln m 1 qquad k 1 2 3 ldots 2mm amp sum n 1 infty frac big G n big n 2 int 0 1 frac operatorname li 1 x gamma ln x x dx 2mm amp sum n 1 infty frac G n n 2 int 0 1 frac operatorname li 1 x gamma ln x x dx end aligned nbsp where li z is the integral logarithm and k m displaystyle tbinom k m nbsp is the binomial coefficient It is also known that the zeta function the gamma function the polygamma functions the Stieltjes constants and many other special functions and constants may be expressed in terms of infinite series containing these numbers 1 17 18 28 29 Generalizations editVarious generalizations are possible for the Gregory coefficients Many of them may be obtained by modifying the parent generating equation For example Van Veen 18 consider ln 1 z z s s n 0 z n n K n s z lt 1 displaystyle left frac ln 1 z z right s s sum n 0 infty frac z n n K n s qquad z lt 1 nbsp and hence n G n K n 1 displaystyle n G n K n 1 nbsp Equivalent generalizations were later proposed by Kowalenko 9 and Rubinstein 30 In a similar manner Gregory coefficients are related to the generalized Bernoulli numbers t e t 1 s k 0 t k k B k s t lt 2 p displaystyle left frac t e t 1 right s sum k 0 infty frac t k k B k s qquad t lt 2 pi nbsp see 18 28 so that n G n B n n 1 n 1 displaystyle n G n frac B n n 1 n 1 nbsp Jordan 1 16 31 defines polynomials psn s such that z 1 z s ln 1 z n 0 z n ps n s z lt 1 displaystyle frac z 1 z s ln 1 z sum n 0 infty z n psi n s qquad z lt 1 nbsp and call them Bernoulli polynomials of the second kind From the above it is clear that Gn psn 0 Carlitz 16 generalized Jordan s polynomials psn s by introducing polynomials b z ln 1 z s 1 z x n 0 z n n b n s x z lt 1 displaystyle left frac z ln 1 z right s cdot 1 z x sum n 0 infty frac z n n beta n s x qquad z lt 1 nbsp and therefore n G n b n 1 0 displaystyle n G n beta n 1 0 nbsp Blagouchine 17 32 introduced numbers Gn k such that n G n k ℓ 1 n s n ℓ ℓ k displaystyle n G n k sum ell 1 n frac s n ell ell k nbsp obtained their generating function and studied their asymptotics at large n Clearly Gn Gn 1 These numbers are strictly alternating Gn k 1 n 1 Gn k and involved in various expansions for the zeta functions Euler s constant and polygamma functions A different generalization of the same kind was also proposed by Komatsu 31 c n k ℓ 0 n s n ℓ ℓ 1 k displaystyle c n k sum ell 0 n frac s n ell ell 1 k nbsp so that Gn cn 1 n Numbers cn k are called by the author poly Cauchy numbers 31 Coffey 21 defines polynomials P n 1 y 1 n 0 y x 1 x 2 x n 1 x d x displaystyle P n 1 y frac 1 n int 0 y x 1 x 2 x cdots n 1 x dx nbsp and therefore Gn Pn 1 1 See also editStirling polynomials Bernoulli polynomials of the second kindReferences edit a b c d Ch Jordan The Calculus of Finite Differences Chelsea Publishing Company USA 1947 a b L Comtet Advanced combinatorics 2nd Edn D Reidel Publishing Company Boston USA 1974 a b H T Davis The approximation of logarithmic numbers Amer Math Monthly vol 64 no 8 pp 11 18 1957 P C Stamper Table of Gregory coefficients Math Comp vol 20 p 465 1966 a b D Merlini R Sprugnoli M C Verri The Cauchy numbers Discrete Math vol 306 pp 1906 1920 2006 a b G Nemes An asymptotic expansion for the Bernoulli numbers of the second kind J Integer Seq vol 14 11 4 8 2011 a b P T Young A 2 adic formula for Bernoulli numbers of the second kind and for the Norlund numbers J Number Theory vol 128 pp 2951 2962 2008 a b V Kowalenko Properties and Applications of the Reciprocal Logarithm Numbers Acta Appl Math vol 109 pp 413 437 2010 a b V Kowalenko Generalizing the reciprocal logarithm numbers by adapting the partition method for a power series expansion Acta Appl Math vol 106 pp 369 420 2009 a b c I M Alabdulmohsin Summability calculus arXiv 1209 5739 2012 a b c I M Alabdulmohsin Summability calculus a Comprehensive Theory of Fractional Finite Sums Springer International Publishing 2018 F Qi and X J Zhang An integral representation some inequalities and complete monotonicity of Bernoulli numbers of the second kind Bull Korean Math Soc vol 52 no 3 pp 987 98 2015 Weisstein Eric W Logarithmic Number From MathWorld A Wolfram Web Resource a b J C Kluyver Euler s constant and natural numbers Proc K Ned Akad Wet vol 27 1 2 1924 a b J F Steffensen Interpolation 2nd Edn Chelsea Publishing Company New York USA 1950 a b c L Carlitz A note on Bernoulli and Euler polynomials of the second kind Scripta Math vol 25 pp 323 330 1961 a b c d e f g h Ia V Blagouchine Two series expansions for the logarithm of the gamma function involving Stirling numbers and containing only rational coefficients for certain arguments related to p 1 J Math Anal Appl 2015 a b c d e S C Van Veen Asymptotic expansion of the generalized Bernoulli numbers Bn n 1 for large values ofn ninteger Indag Math Proc vol 13 pp 335 341 1951 a b I V Blagouchine A Note on Some Recent Results for the Bernoulli Numbers of the Second Kind Journal of Integer Sequences Vol 20 No 3 2017 Article 17 3 8 arXiv 1612 03292 Ernst Schroder Zeitschrift fur Mathematik und Physik vol 25 pp 106 117 1880 a b M W Coffey Series representations for the Stieltjes constants Rocky Mountain J Math vol 44 pp 443 477 2014 Ia V Blagouchine A theorem for the closed form evaluation of the first generalized Stieltjes constant at rational arguments and some related summations J Number Theory vol 148 pp 537 592 and vol 151 pp 276 277 2015 B Candelpergher and M A Coppo A new class of identities involving Cauchy numbers harmonic numbers and zeta values Ramanujan J vol 27 pp 305 328 2012 B Candelpergher and M A Coppo A new class of identities involving Cauchy numbers harmonic numbers and zeta values Ramanujan J vol 27 pp 305 328 2012 OEIS A269330 OEIS A270857 OEIS A270859 a b N Norlund Vorlesungen uber Differenzenrechnung Springer Berlin 1924 Ia V Blagouchine Expansions of generalized Euler s constants into the series of polynomials in p 2 and into the formal enveloping series with rational coefficients only J Number Theory vol 158 pp 365 396 2016 M O Rubinstein Identities for the Riemann zeta function Ramanujan J vol 27 pp 29 42 2012 a b c Takao Komatsu On poly Cauchy numbers and polynomials 2012 Ia V Blagouchine Three Notes on Ser s and Hasse s Representations for the Zeta functions Integers Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory vol 18A Article A3 pp 1 45 2018 arXiv 1606 02044 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gregory coefficients amp oldid 1194373439, 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