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Stirling numbers of the first kind

In mathematics, especially in combinatorics, Stirling numbers of the first kind arise in the study of permutations. In particular, the Stirling numbers of the first kind count permutations according to their number of cycles (counting fixed points as cycles of length one).

The Stirling numbers of the first and second kind can be understood as inverses of one another when viewed as triangular matrices. This article is devoted to specifics of Stirling numbers of the first kind. Identities linking the two kinds appear in the article on Stirling numbers.

Definitions edit

Stirling numbers of the first kind are the coefficients   in the expansion of the falling factorial

 

into powers of the variable  :

 

For example,  , leading to the values  ,  , and  .

Subsequently, it was discovered that the absolute values   of these numbers are equal to the number of permutations of certain kinds. These absolute values, which are known as unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind, are often denoted   or  . They may be defined directly to be the number of permutations of   elements with   disjoint cycles. For example, of the   permutations of three elements, there is one permutation with three cycles (the identity permutation, given in one-line notation by   or in cycle notation by  ), three permutations with two cycles ( ,  , and  ) and two permutations with one cycle (  and  ). Thus,  ,   and  . These can be seen to agree with the previous calculation of   for  . It was observed by Alfréd Rényi that the unsigned Stirling number   also count the number of permutations of size   with   left-to-right maxima.[1]

The unsigned Stirling numbers may also be defined algebraically, as the coefficients of the rising factorial:

 .

The notations used on this page for Stirling numbers are not universal, and may conflict with notations in other sources. (The square bracket notation   is also common notation for the Gaussian coefficients.)

Definition by permutation edit

  can be defined as the number of permutations on   elements with   cycles.

 
s(4,2)=11

The image at right shows that  : the symmetric group on 4 objects has 3 permutations of the form

  (having 2 orbits, each of size 2),

and 8 permutations of the form

  (having 1 orbit of size 3 and 1 orbit of size 1).

These numbers can be calculated by considering the orbits as conjugancy classes (last bullet point).

Signs edit

The signs of the (signed) Stirling numbers of the first kind are predictable and depend on the parity of nk. In particular,

 

Recurrence relation edit

The unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind can be calculated by the recurrence relation

 

for  , with the initial conditions

 

for  .

It follows immediately that the (signed) Stirling numbers of the first kind satisfy the recurrence

 .
Algebraic proof

We prove the recurrence relation using the definition of Stirling numbers in terms of rising factorials. Distributing the last term of the product, we have

 

The coefficient of   on the left-hand side of this equation is  . The coefficient of   in   is  , while the coefficient of   in   is  . Since the two sides are equal as polynomials, the coefficients of   on both sides must be equal, and the result follows.

Combinatorial proof

We prove the recurrence relation using the definition of Stirling numbers in terms of permutations with a given number of cycles (or equivalently, orbits).

Consider forming a permutation of   objects from a permutation of   objects by adding a distinguished object. There are exactly two ways in which this can be accomplished. We could do this by forming a singleton cycle, i.e., leaving the extra object alone. This increases the number of cycles by 1 and so accounts for the   term in the recurrence formula. We could also insert the new object into one of the existing cycles. Consider an arbitrary permutation of   objects with   cycles, and label the objects  , so that the permutation is represented by

 

To form a new permutation of   objects and   cycles one must insert the new object into this array. There are   ways to perform this insertion, inserting the new object immediately following any of the   already present. This explains the   term of the recurrence relation. These two cases include all possibilities, so the recurrence relation follows.

Table of values edit

Below is a triangular array of unsigned values for the Stirling numbers of the first kind, similar in form to Pascal's triangle. These values are easy to generate using the recurrence relation in the previous section.

k
n
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
0 1
1 0 1
2 0 1 1
3 0 2 3 1
4 0 6 11 6 1
5 0 24 50 35 10 1
6 0 120 274 225 85 15 1
7 0 720 1764 1624 735 175 21 1
8 0 5040 13068 13132 6769 1960 322 28 1
9 0 40320 109584 118124 67284 22449 4536 546 36 1
10 0 362880 1026576 1172700 723680 269325 63273 9450 870 45 1

Properties edit

Simple identities edit

Using the Kronecker delta one have,

 

and

  if  , or more generally   if k > n.

Also

 

and

 

Similar relationships involving the Stirling numbers hold for the Bernoulli polynomials. Many relations for the Stirling numbers shadow similar relations on the binomial coefficients. The study of these 'shadow relationships' is termed umbral calculus and culminates in the theory of Sheffer sequences. Generalizations of the Stirling numbers of both kinds to arbitrary complex-valued inputs may be extended through the relations of these triangles to the Stirling convolution polynomials.[2]

Combinatorial proofs

These identities may be derived by enumerating permutations directly. For example, a permutation of n elements with n − 3 cycles must have one of the following forms:

  • n − 6 fixed points and three two-cycles
  • n − 5 fixed points, a three-cycle and a two-cycle, or
  • n − 4 fixed points and a four-cycle.

The three types may be enumerated as follows:

  • choose the six elements that go into the two-cycles, decompose them into two-cycles and take into account that the order of the cycles is not important:
 
  • choose the five elements that go into the three-cycle and the two-cycle, choose the elements of the three-cycle and take into account that three elements generate two three-cycles:
 
  • choose the four elements of the four-cycle and take into account that four elements generate six four-cycles:
 

Sum the three contributions to obtain

 

Note that all the combinatorial proofs above use either binomials or multinomials of  .

Therefore if   is prime, then:

  for  .

Expansions for fixed k edit

Since the Stirling numbers are the coefficients of a polynomial with roots 0, 1, ..., n − 1, one has by Vieta's formulas that

 

In other words, the Stirling numbers of the first kind are given by elementary symmetric polynomials evaluated at 0, 1, ..., n − 1.[3] In this form, the simple identities given above take the form

 
 
 
and so on.

One may produce alternative forms for the Stirling numbers of the first kind with a similar approach preceded by some algebraic manipulation: since

 

it follows from Newton's formulas that one can expand the Stirling numbers of the first kind in terms of generalized harmonic numbers. This yields identities like

 
 
 

where Hn is the harmonic number   and Hn(m) is the generalized harmonic number

 

These relations can be generalized to give

 

where w(n, m) is defined recursively in terms of the generalized harmonic numbers by

 

(Here δ is the Kronecker delta function and   is the Pochhammer symbol.)[4]

For fixed   these weighted harmonic number expansions are generated by the generating function

 

where the notation   means extraction of the coefficient of   from the following formal power series (see the non-exponential Bell polynomials and section 3 of [5]).

More generally, sums related to these weighted harmonic number expansions of the Stirling numbers of the first kind can be defined through generalized zeta series transforms of generating functions.[6][7]

One can also "invert" the relations for these Stirling numbers given in terms of the  -order harmonic numbers to write the integer-order generalized harmonic numbers in terms of weighted sums of terms involving the Stirling numbers of the first kind. For example, when   the second-order and third-order harmonic numbers are given by

 
 

More generally, one can invert the Bell polynomial generating function for the Stirling numbers expanded in terms of the  -order harmonic numbers to obtain that for integers  

 

Finite sums edit

Since permutations are partitioned by number of cycles, one has

 

The identity

 

can be proved by the techniques on the page Stirling numbers and exponential generating functions.

The table in section 6.1 of Concrete Mathematics provides a plethora of generalized forms of finite sums involving the Stirling numbers. Several particular finite sums relevant to this article include

 

Additionally, if we define the second-order Eulerian numbers by the triangular recurrence relation [8]

 

we arrive at the following identity related to the form of the Stirling convolution polynomials which can be employed to generalize both Stirling number triangles to arbitrary real, or complex-valued, values of the input  :

 

Particular expansions of the previous identity lead to the following identities expanding the Stirling numbers of the first kind for the first few small values of  :

 

Software tools for working with finite sums involving Stirling numbers and Eulerian numbers are provided by the RISC Stirling.m package utilities in Mathematica. Other software packages for guessing formulas for sequences (and polynomial sequence sums) involving Stirling numbers and other special triangles is available for both Mathematica and Sage here and here, respectively.[9]


Congruences edit

The following congruence identity may be proved via a generating function-based approach:[10]

 

More recent results providing Jacobi-type J-fractions that generate the single factorial function and generalized factorial-related products lead to other new congruence results for the Stirling numbers of the first kind.[11] For example, working modulo   we can prove that

 

Where   is the Iverson bracket.

and working modulo   we can similarly prove that

 

More generally, for fixed integers   if we define the ordered roots

 

then we may expand congruences for these Stirling numbers defined as the coefficients

 

in the following form where the functions,  , denote fixed polynomials of degree   in   for each  ,  , and  :

 

Section 6.2 of the reference cited above provides more explicit expansions related to these congruences for the  -order harmonic numbers and for the generalized factorial products,  .

Generating functions edit

A variety of identities may be derived by manipulating the generating function (see change of basis):

 

Using the equality

 

it follows that

 

and

 

(This identity is valid for formal power series, and the sum converges in the complex plane for |z| < 1.) Other identities arise by exchanging the order of summation, taking derivatives, making substitutions for z or u, etc. For example, we may derive:[12]

 

or

 

and

 

where   and   are the Riemann zeta function and the Hurwitz zeta function respectively, and even evaluate this integral

 

where   is the gamma function. There also exist more complicated expressions for the zeta-functions involving the Stirling numbers. One, for example, has

 

This series generalizes Hasse's series for the Hurwitz zeta-function (we obtain Hasse's series by setting k=1).[13][14]

Asymptotics edit

The next estimate given in terms of the Euler gamma constant applies:[15]

 

For fixed   we have the following estimate :

 

Explicit formula edit

It is well-known that we don't know any one-sum formula for Stirling numbers of the first kind. A two-sum formula can be obtained using one of the symmetric formulae for Stirling numbers in conjunction with the explicit formula for Stirling numbers of the second kind.

 

As discussed earlier, by Vieta's formulas, one get

 
The Stirling number s(n,n-p) can be found from the formula[16]
 

where   The sum is a sum over all partitions of p.

Another exact nested sum expansion for these Stirling numbers is computed by elementary symmetric polynomials corresponding to the coefficients in   of a product of the form  . In particular, we see that

 

Newton's identities combined with the above expansions may be used to give an alternate proof of the weighted expansions involving the generalized harmonic numbers already noted above.

Relations to natural logarithm function edit

The nth derivative of the μth power of the natural logarithm involves the signed Stirling numbers of the first kind:

 

where  is the falling factorial, and  is the signed Stirling number.

It can be proved by using mathematical induction.

Other formulas edit

Stirling numbers of the first kind appear in the formula for Gregory coefficients and in a finite sum identity involving Bell number[17]

 

 

Infinite series involving the finite sums with the Stirling numbers often lead to the special functions. For example[12][18]

 

and

 

or even

 

where γm are the Stieltjes constants and δm,0 represents the Kronecker delta function.

Notice that this last identity immediately implies relations between the polylogarithm functions, the Stirling number exponential generating functions given above, and the Stirling-number-based power series for the generalized Nielsen polylogarithm functions.

Generalizations edit

There are many notions of generalized Stirling numbers that may be defined (depending on application) in a number of differing combinatorial contexts. In so much as the Stirling numbers of the first kind correspond to the coefficients of the distinct polynomial expansions of the single factorial function,  , we may extend this notion to define triangular recurrence relations for more general classes of products.

In particular, for any fixed arithmetic function   and symbolic parameters  , related generalized factorial products of the form

 

may be studied from the point of view of the classes of generalized Stirling numbers of the first kind defined by the following coefficients of the powers of   in the expansions of   and then by the next corresponding triangular recurrence relation:

 

These coefficients satisfy a number of analogous properties to those for the Stirling numbers of the first kind as well as recurrence relations and functional equations related to the f-harmonic numbers,  .[19]

One special case of these bracketed coefficients corresponding to   allows us to expand the multiple factorial, or multifactorial functions as polynomials in   (see generalizations of the double factorial).[20]

The Stirling numbers of both kinds, the binomial coefficients, and the first and second-order Eulerian numbers are all defined by special cases of a triangular super-recurrence of the form

 

for integers   and where   whenever   or  . In this sense, the form of the Stirling numbers of the first kind may also be generalized by this parameterized super-recurrence for fixed scalars   (not all zero).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rényi, Alfred (1962). "Théorie des éléments saillants d'une suite d'observations". Annales scientifiques de l'Université de Clermont. Mathématiques. Tome 8 (2): 7–13.
  2. ^ See section 6.2 and 6.5 of Concrete Mathematics.
  3. ^ Richard P. Stanley, Enumerative Combinatorics, volume 1 (2nd ed.). Page 34 of the online version.
  4. ^ Adamchik, V. (1996). "On Stirling numbers and Euler sums" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ Flajolet and Sedgewick (1995). "Mellin transforms and asymptotics: Finite differences and Rice's integrals" (PDF). Theoretical Computer Science. 144 (1–2): 101–124. doi:10.1016/0304-3975(94)00281-m.
  6. ^ Schmidt, M. D. (30 October 2016). "Zeta Series Generating Function Transformations Related to Polylogarithm Functions and the k-Order Harmonic Numbers". arXiv:1610.09666 [math.CO].
  7. ^ Schmidt, M. D. (3 November 2016). "Zeta Series Generating Function Transformations Related to Generalized Stirling Numbers and Partial Sums of the Hurwitz Zeta Function". arXiv:1611.00957 [math.CO].
  8. ^ A table of the second-order Eulerian numbers and a synopsis of their properties is found in section 6.2 of Concrete Mathematics. For example, we have that  . These numbers also have the following combinatorial interpretation: If we form all permutations of the multiset   with the property that all numbers between the two occurrences of   are greater than   for  , then   is the number of such permutations that have   ascents.
  9. ^ Schmidt, M. D. (2016). "A Computer Algebra Package for Polynomial Sequence Recognition". arXiv:1609.07301 [math.CO].
  10. ^ Herbert Wilf, Generatingfunctionology, Section 4.6.
  11. ^ Schmidt, M. D. (2017). "Jacobi-Type Continued Fractions for the Ordinary Generating Functions of Generalized Factorial Functions". J. Integer Seq. 20 (3). arXiv:1610.09691.
  12. ^ a b Ia. V. Blagouchine (2016). "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". Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications. 442 (2): 404–434. arXiv:1408.3902. doi:10.1016/j.jmaa.2016.04.032. S2CID 119661147. arXiv
  13. ^ Blagouchine, Iaroslav V. (2018). "Three Notes on Ser's and Hasse's Representations for the Zeta-functions". INTEGERS: The Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory. 18A: 1–45. arXiv:1606.02044. Bibcode:2016arXiv160602044B.
  14. ^ See also some more interesting series representations and expansions mentioned in Connon's article: Connon, D. F. (2007). "Some series and integrals involving the Riemann zeta function, binomial coefficients and the harmonic numbers (Volume I)". arXiv:0710.4022 [math.HO]..
  15. ^ These estimates are found in Section 26.8 of the NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions.
  16. ^ J. Malenfant, "Finite, Closed-form Expressions for the Partition Function and for Euler, Bernoulli, and Stirling Numbers"
  17. ^ Komatsu, Takao; Pita-Ruiz, Claudio (2018). "Some formulas for Bell numbers". Filomat. 32 (11): 3881–3889. doi:10.2298/FIL1811881K. ISSN 0354-5180.
  18. ^ Ia. V. Blagouchine (2016). "Expansions of generalized Euler's constants into the series of polynomials in π−2 and into the formal enveloping series with rational coefficients only". Journal of Number Theory. 158 (2): 365–396. doi:10.1016/j.jnt.2015.06.012. arXiv
  19. ^ Combinatorial Identities for Generalized Stirling Numbers Expanding f-Factorial Functions and the f-Harmonic Numbers (2016).
  20. ^ Schmidt, Maxie D. (2010). "Generalized j-Factorial Functions, Polynomials, and Applications". J. Integer Seq. 13.

stirling, numbers, first, kind, mathematics, especially, combinatorics, arise, study, permutations, particular, count, permutations, according, their, number, cycles, counting, fixed, points, cycles, length, stirling, numbers, first, second, kind, understood, . In mathematics especially in combinatorics Stirling numbers of the first kind arise in the study of permutations In particular the Stirling numbers of the first kind count permutations according to their number of cycles counting fixed points as cycles of length one The Stirling numbers of the first and second kind can be understood as inverses of one another when viewed as triangular matrices This article is devoted to specifics of Stirling numbers of the first kind Identities linking the two kinds appear in the article on Stirling numbers Contents 1 Definitions 1 1 Definition by permutation 1 2 Signs 2 Recurrence relation 3 Table of values 4 Properties 4 1 Simple identities 4 2 Expansions for fixed k 4 3 Finite sums 4 4 Congruences 4 5 Generating functions 4 6 Asymptotics 4 7 Explicit formula 4 8 Relations to natural logarithm function 4 9 Other formulas 5 Generalizations 6 See also 7 ReferencesDefinitions editStirling numbers of the first kind are the coefficients s n k displaystyle s n k nbsp in the expansion of the falling factorial x n x x 1 x 2 x n 1 displaystyle x n x x 1 x 2 cdots x n 1 nbsp into powers of the variable x displaystyle x nbsp x n k 0ns n k xk displaystyle x n sum k 0 n s n k x k nbsp For example x 3 x x 1 x 2 x3 3x2 2x displaystyle x 3 x x 1 x 2 x 3 3x 2 2x nbsp leading to the values s 3 3 1 displaystyle s 3 3 1 nbsp s 3 2 3 displaystyle s 3 2 3 nbsp and s 3 1 2 displaystyle s 3 1 2 nbsp Subsequently it was discovered that the absolute values s n k displaystyle s n k nbsp of these numbers are equal to the number of permutations of certain kinds These absolute values which are known as unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind are often denoted c n k displaystyle c n k nbsp or nk displaystyle left n atop k right nbsp They may be defined directly to be the number of permutations of n displaystyle n nbsp elements with k displaystyle k nbsp disjoint cycles For example of the 3 6 displaystyle 3 6 nbsp permutations of three elements there is one permutation with three cycles the identity permutation given in one line notation by 123 displaystyle 123 nbsp or in cycle notation by 1 2 3 displaystyle 1 2 3 nbsp three permutations with two cycles 132 1 23 displaystyle 132 1 23 nbsp 213 12 3 displaystyle 213 12 3 nbsp and 321 13 2 displaystyle 321 13 2 nbsp and two permutations with one cycle 312 132 displaystyle 312 132 nbsp and 231 123 displaystyle 231 123 nbsp Thus 33 1 displaystyle left 3 atop 3 right 1 nbsp 32 3 displaystyle left 3 atop 2 right 3 nbsp and 31 2 displaystyle left 3 atop 1 right 2 nbsp These can be seen to agree with the previous calculation of s n k displaystyle s n k nbsp for n 3 displaystyle n 3 nbsp It was observed by Alfred Renyi that the unsigned Stirling number nk displaystyle left n atop k right nbsp also count the number of permutations of size n displaystyle n nbsp with k displaystyle k nbsp left to right maxima 1 The unsigned Stirling numbers may also be defined algebraically as the coefficients of the rising factorial xn x x 1 x n 1 k 0n nk xk displaystyle x overline n x x 1 cdots x n 1 sum k 0 n left n atop k right x k nbsp The notations used on this page for Stirling numbers are not universal and may conflict with notations in other sources The square bracket notation nk displaystyle left n atop k right nbsp is also common notation for the Gaussian coefficients Definition by permutation edit nk displaystyle left n atop k right nbsp can be defined as the number of permutations on n displaystyle n nbsp elements with k displaystyle k nbsp cycles nbsp s 4 2 11The image at right shows that 42 11 displaystyle left 4 atop 2 right 11 nbsp the symmetric group on 4 objects has 3 permutations of the form displaystyle bullet bullet bullet bullet nbsp having 2 orbits each of size 2 and 8 permutations of the form displaystyle bullet bullet bullet bullet nbsp having 1 orbit of size 3 and 1 orbit of size 1 These numbers can be calculated by considering the orbits as conjugancy classes last bullet point Signs edit The signs of the signed Stirling numbers of the first kind are predictable and depend on the parity of n k In particular s n k 1 n k nk displaystyle s n k 1 n k left n atop k right nbsp Recurrence relation editThe unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind can be calculated by the recurrence relation n 1k n nk nk 1 displaystyle left n 1 atop k right n left n atop k right left n atop k 1 right nbsp for k gt 0 displaystyle k gt 0 nbsp with the initial conditions 00 1and n0 0n 0 displaystyle left 0 atop 0 right 1 quad mbox and quad left n atop 0 right left 0 atop n right 0 nbsp for n gt 0 displaystyle n gt 0 nbsp It follows immediately that the signed Stirling numbers of the first kind satisfy the recurrence s n 1 k n s n k s n k 1 displaystyle s n 1 k n cdot s n k s n k 1 nbsp Algebraic proof We prove the recurrence relation using the definition of Stirling numbers in terms of rising factorials Distributing the last term of the product we have xn 1 x x 1 x n 1 x n n xn x xn displaystyle x overline n 1 x x 1 cdots x n 1 x n n cdot x overline n x cdot x overline n nbsp The coefficient of xk displaystyle x k nbsp on the left hand side of this equation is n 1k displaystyle left n 1 atop k right nbsp The coefficient of xk displaystyle x k nbsp in n xn displaystyle n cdot x overline n nbsp is n nk displaystyle n cdot left n atop k right nbsp while the coefficient of xk displaystyle x k nbsp in x xn displaystyle x cdot x overline n nbsp is nk 1 displaystyle left n atop k 1 right nbsp Since the two sides are equal as polynomials the coefficients of xk displaystyle x k nbsp on both sides must be equal and the result follows Combinatorial proof We prove the recurrence relation using the definition of Stirling numbers in terms of permutations with a given number of cycles or equivalently orbits Consider forming a permutation of n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp objects from a permutation of n displaystyle n nbsp objects by adding a distinguished object There are exactly two ways in which this can be accomplished We could do this by forming a singleton cycle i e leaving the extra object alone This increases the number of cycles by 1 and so accounts for the nk 1 displaystyle left n atop k 1 right nbsp term in the recurrence formula We could also insert the new object into one of the existing cycles Consider an arbitrary permutation of n displaystyle n nbsp objects with k displaystyle k nbsp cycles and label the objects a1 an displaystyle a 1 dots a n nbsp so that the permutation is represented by a1 aj1 aj1 1 aj2 ajk 1 1 an k cycles displaystyle displaystyle underbrace a 1 ldots a j 1 a j 1 1 ldots a j 2 ldots a j k 1 1 ldots a n k mathrm cycles nbsp To form a new permutation of n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp objects and k displaystyle k nbsp cycles one must insert the new object into this array There are n displaystyle n nbsp ways to perform this insertion inserting the new object immediately following any of the ai displaystyle a i nbsp already present This explains the n nk displaystyle n left n atop k right nbsp term of the recurrence relation These two cases include all possibilities so the recurrence relation follows Table of values editBelow is a triangular array of unsigned values for the Stirling numbers of the first kind similar in form to Pascal s triangle These values are easy to generate using the recurrence relation in the previous section kn 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 100 11 0 12 0 1 13 0 2 3 14 0 6 11 6 15 0 24 50 35 10 16 0 120 274 225 85 15 17 0 720 1764 1624 735 175 21 18 0 5040 13068 13132 6769 1960 322 28 19 0 40320 109584 118124 67284 22449 4536 546 36 110 0 362880 1026576 1172700 723680 269325 63273 9450 870 45 1Properties editSimple identities edit Using the Kronecker delta one have n0 dn displaystyle left n atop 0 right delta n nbsp and 0k 0 displaystyle left 0 atop k right 0 nbsp if k gt 0 displaystyle k gt 0 nbsp or more generally nk 0 displaystyle left n atop k right 0 nbsp if k gt n Also n1 n 1 nn 1 nn 1 n2 displaystyle left n atop 1 right n 1 quad left n atop n right 1 quad left n atop n 1 right n choose 2 nbsp and nn 2 3n 14 n3 and nn 3 n2 n4 displaystyle left n atop n 2 right frac 3n 1 4 n choose 3 quad mbox and quad left n atop n 3 right n choose 2 n choose 4 nbsp Similar relationships involving the Stirling numbers hold for the Bernoulli polynomials Many relations for the Stirling numbers shadow similar relations on the binomial coefficients The study of these shadow relationships is termed umbral calculus and culminates in the theory of Sheffer sequences Generalizations of the Stirling numbers of both kinds to arbitrary complex valued inputs may be extended through the relations of these triangles to the Stirling convolution polynomials 2 Combinatorial proofs These identities may be derived by enumerating permutations directly For example a permutation of n elements with n 3 cycles must have one of the following forms n 6 fixed points and three two cycles n 5 fixed points a three cycle and a two cycle or n 4 fixed points and a four cycle The three types may be enumerated as follows choose the six elements that go into the two cycles decompose them into two cycles and take into account that the order of the cycles is not important n6 62 2 2 16 displaystyle n choose 6 6 choose 2 2 2 frac 1 6 nbsp dd choose the five elements that go into the three cycle and the two cycle choose the elements of the three cycle and take into account that three elements generate two three cycles n5 53 2 displaystyle n choose 5 5 choose 3 times 2 nbsp dd choose the four elements of the four cycle and take into account that four elements generate six four cycles n4 6 displaystyle n choose 4 times 6 nbsp dd Sum the three contributions to obtain n6 62 2 2 16 n5 53 2 n4 6 n2 n4 displaystyle n choose 6 6 choose 2 2 2 frac 1 6 n choose 5 5 choose 3 times 2 n choose 4 times 6 n choose 2 n choose 4 nbsp Note that all the combinatorial proofs above use either binomials or multinomials of n displaystyle n nbsp Therefore if p displaystyle p nbsp is prime then p pk displaystyle p left p atop k right nbsp for 1 lt k lt p displaystyle 1 lt k lt p nbsp Expansions for fixed k edit Since the Stirling numbers are the coefficients of a polynomial with roots 0 1 n 1 one has by Vieta s formulas that nn k 0 i1 lt lt ik lt ni1i2 ik displaystyle left begin matrix n n k end matrix right sum 0 leq i 1 lt ldots lt i k lt n i 1 i 2 cdots i k nbsp In other words the Stirling numbers of the first kind are given by elementary symmetric polynomials evaluated at 0 1 n 1 3 In this form the simple identities given above take the form nn 1 i 0n 1i n2 displaystyle left begin matrix n n 1 end matrix right sum i 0 n 1 i binom n 2 nbsp nn 2 i 0n 1 j 0i 1ij 3n 14 n3 displaystyle left begin matrix n n 2 end matrix right sum i 0 n 1 sum j 0 i 1 ij frac 3n 1 4 binom n 3 nbsp nn 3 i 0n 1 j 0i 1 k 0j 1ijk n2 n4 displaystyle left begin matrix n n 3 end matrix right sum i 0 n 1 sum j 0 i 1 sum k 0 j 1 ijk binom n 2 binom n 4 nbsp and so on One may produce alternative forms for the Stirling numbers of the first kind with a similar approach preceded by some algebraic manipulation since x 1 x 2 x n 1 n 1 x 1 x2 1 xn 1 1 displaystyle x 1 x 2 cdots x n 1 n 1 cdot x 1 left frac x 2 1 right cdots left frac x n 1 1 right nbsp it follows from Newton s formulas that one can expand the Stirling numbers of the first kind in terms of generalized harmonic numbers This yields identities like n2 n 1 Hn 1 displaystyle left n atop 2 right n 1 H n 1 nbsp n3 12 n 1 Hn 1 2 Hn 1 2 displaystyle left n atop 3 right frac 1 2 n 1 left H n 1 2 H n 1 2 right nbsp n4 13 n 1 Hn 1 3 3Hn 1Hn 1 2 2Hn 1 3 displaystyle left n atop 4 right frac 1 3 n 1 left H n 1 3 3H n 1 H n 1 2 2H n 1 3 right nbsp where Hn is the harmonic number Hn 11 12 1n displaystyle H n frac 1 1 frac 1 2 ldots frac 1 n nbsp and Hn m is the generalized harmonic numberHn m 11m 12m 1nm displaystyle H n m frac 1 1 m frac 1 2 m ldots frac 1 n m nbsp These relations can be generalized to give 1 n 1 nk 1 i1 1n 1 i2 i1 1n 1 ik ik 1 1n 11i1i2 ik w n k k displaystyle frac 1 n 1 left begin matrix n k 1 end matrix right sum i 1 1 n 1 sum i 2 i 1 1 n 1 cdots sum i k i k 1 1 n 1 frac 1 i 1 i 2 cdots i k frac w n k k nbsp where w n m is defined recursively in terms of the generalized harmonic numbers by w n m dm 0 k 0m 1 1 m kHn 1 k 1 w n m 1 k displaystyle w n m delta m 0 sum k 0 m 1 1 m k H n 1 k 1 w n m 1 k nbsp Here d is the Kronecker delta function and m k displaystyle m k nbsp is the Pochhammer symbol 4 For fixed n 0 displaystyle n geq 0 nbsp these weighted harmonic number expansions are generated by the generating function 1n n 1k xk exp m 1 1 m 1Hn m mxm displaystyle frac 1 n left begin matrix n 1 k end matrix right x k exp left sum m geq 1 frac 1 m 1 H n m m x m right nbsp where the notation xk displaystyle x k nbsp means extraction of the coefficient of xk displaystyle x k nbsp from the following formal power series see the non exponential Bell polynomials and section 3 of 5 More generally sums related to these weighted harmonic number expansions of the Stirling numbers of the first kind can be defined through generalized zeta series transforms of generating functions 6 7 One can also invert the relations for these Stirling numbers given in terms of the k displaystyle k nbsp order harmonic numbers to write the integer order generalized harmonic numbers in terms of weighted sums of terms involving the Stirling numbers of the first kind For example when k 2 3 displaystyle k 2 3 nbsp the second order and third order harmonic numbers are given by n 2 Hn 2 n 12 2 2 n 11 n 13 displaystyle n 2 cdot H n 2 left begin matrix n 1 2 end matrix right 2 2 left begin matrix n 1 1 end matrix right left begin matrix n 1 3 end matrix right nbsp n 3 Hn 3 n 12 3 3 n 11 n 12 n 13 3 n 11 2 n 14 displaystyle n 3 cdot H n 3 left begin matrix n 1 2 end matrix right 3 3 left begin matrix n 1 1 end matrix right left begin matrix n 1 2 end matrix right left begin matrix n 1 3 end matrix right 3 left begin matrix n 1 1 end matrix right 2 left begin matrix n 1 4 end matrix right nbsp More generally one can invert the Bell polynomial generating function for the Stirling numbers expanded in terms of the m displaystyle m nbsp order harmonic numbers to obtain that for integers m 2 displaystyle m geq 2 nbsp Hn m m xm log 1 k 1 n 1k 1 x kn displaystyle H n m m times x m log left 1 sum k geq 1 left begin matrix n 1 k 1 end matrix right frac x k n right nbsp Finite sums edit Since permutations are partitioned by number of cycles one has k 0n nk n displaystyle sum k 0 n left n atop k right n nbsp The identity p kn np pk n 1k 1 displaystyle sum p k n left n atop p right binom p k left n 1 atop k 1 right nbsp can be proved by the techniques on the page Stirling numbers and exponential generating functions The table in section 6 1 of Concrete Mathematics provides a plethora of generalized forms of finite sums involving the Stirling numbers Several particular finite sums relevant to this article include nm k mn n 1k 1 km 1 m k n 1m 1 k mn km n k m n 1m k 0m n k n kk nl m l ml k kl n km nk displaystyle begin aligned left n atop m right amp sum k m n left n 1 atop k 1 right binom k m 1 m k left n 1 atop m 1 right amp sum k m n left k atop m right frac n k left m n 1 atop m right amp sum k 0 m n k left n k atop k right left n atop l m right binom l m l amp sum k left k atop l right left n k atop m right binom n k end aligned nbsp Additionally if we define the second order Eulerian numbers by the triangular recurrence relation 8 nk k 1 n 1k 2n 1 k n 1k 1 displaystyle left langle left langle n atop k right rangle right rangle k 1 left langle left langle n 1 atop k right rangle right rangle 2n 1 k left langle left langle n 1 atop k 1 right rangle right rangle nbsp we arrive at the following identity related to the form of the Stirling convolution polynomials which can be employed to generalize both Stirling number triangles to arbitrary real or complex valued values of the input x displaystyle x nbsp xx n k 0n nk x k2n displaystyle left x atop x n right sum k 0 n left langle left langle n atop k right rangle right rangle binom x k 2n nbsp Particular expansions of the previous identity lead to the following identities expanding the Stirling numbers of the first kind for the first few small values of n 1 2 3 displaystyle n 1 2 3 nbsp xx 1 x2 xx 2 x4 2 x 14 xx 3 x6 8 x 16 6 x 26 displaystyle begin aligned left begin matrix x x 1 end matrix right amp binom x 2 left begin matrix x x 2 end matrix right amp binom x 4 2 binom x 1 4 left begin matrix x x 3 end matrix right amp binom x 6 8 binom x 1 6 6 binom x 2 6 end aligned nbsp Software tools for working with finite sums involving Stirling numbers and Eulerian numbers are provided by the RISC Stirling m package utilities in Mathematica Other software packages for guessing formulas for sequences and polynomial sequence sums involving Stirling numbers and other special triangles is available for both Mathematica and Sage here and here respectively 9 Congruences edit The following congruence identity may be proved via a generating function based approach 10 nm n 2 m n 2 xm x n 2 x 1 n 2 mod2 displaystyle begin aligned left begin matrix n m end matrix right amp equiv binom lfloor n 2 rfloor m lceil n 2 rceil x m left x lceil n 2 rceil x 1 lfloor n 2 rfloor right amp amp pmod 2 end aligned nbsp More recent results providing Jacobi type J fractions that generate the single factorial function and generalized factorial related products lead to other new congruence results for the Stirling numbers of the first kind 11 For example working modulo 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp we can prove that n1 2n4 n 2 n 1 mod2 n2 3 2n16 n 1 n 3 n 2 mod2 n3 2n 7 9n 20 n 1 n 4 n 3 mod2 n4 2n 9 3n 10 3n 7 n 1 n 5 n 4 mod2 displaystyle begin aligned left begin matrix n 1 end matrix right amp equiv frac 2 n 4 n geq 2 n 1 amp amp pmod 2 left begin matrix n 2 end matrix right amp equiv frac 3 cdot 2 n 16 n 1 n geq 3 n 2 amp amp pmod 2 left begin matrix n 3 end matrix right amp equiv 2 n 7 9n 20 n 1 n geq 4 n 3 amp amp pmod 2 left begin matrix n 4 end matrix right amp equiv 2 n 9 3n 10 3n 7 n 1 n geq 5 n 4 amp amp pmod 2 end aligned nbsp Where b displaystyle b nbsp is the Iverson bracket and working modulo 3 displaystyle 3 nbsp we can similarly prove that nm xm x n 3 x 1 n 1 3 x 2 n 3 mod3 k 0m n 1 3 k n 3 m k n 3 2 n 3 n 3 m k mod3 displaystyle begin aligned left begin matrix n m end matrix right amp equiv x m x lceil n 3 rceil x 1 lceil n 1 3 rceil x 2 lfloor n 3 rfloor amp amp pmod 3 amp equiv sum k 0 m binom lceil n 1 3 rceil k binom lfloor n 3 rfloor m k lfloor n 3 rfloor 2 lceil n 3 rceil lfloor n 3 rfloor m k amp amp pmod 3 end aligned nbsp More generally for fixed integers h 3 displaystyle h geq 3 nbsp if we define the ordered roots wh i i 1h 1 wj i 0h 1 h 1i h i 1 wj i 0 1 j lt h displaystyle left omega h i right i 1 h 1 left omega j sum i 0 h 1 binom h 1 i frac h i 1 omega j i 0 1 leq j lt h right nbsp then we may expand congruences for these Stirling numbers defined as the coefficients nm Rm R R 1 R n 1 displaystyle left begin matrix n m end matrix right R m R R 1 cdots R n 1 nbsp in the following form where the functions ph i m n displaystyle p h i m n nbsp denote fixed polynomials of degree m displaystyle m nbsp in n displaystyle n nbsp for each h displaystyle h nbsp m displaystyle m nbsp and i displaystyle i nbsp nm i 0h 1ph i m n wh in n gt m n m modh displaystyle left begin matrix n m end matrix right left sum i 0 h 1 p h i m n times omega h i n right n gt m n m qquad pmod h nbsp Section 6 2 of the reference cited above provides more explicit expansions related to these congruences for the r displaystyle r nbsp order harmonic numbers and for the generalized factorial products pn a R R R a R n 1 a displaystyle p n alpha R R R alpha cdots R n 1 alpha nbsp Generating functions edit A variety of identities may be derived by manipulating the generating function see change of basis H z u 1 z u n 0 un zn n 0 znn k 0ns n k uk k 0 uk n k znn s n k displaystyle H z u 1 z u sum n 0 infty u choose n z n sum n 0 infty frac z n n sum k 0 n s n k u k sum k 0 infty u k sum n k infty frac z n n s n k nbsp Using the equality 1 z u eulog 1 z k 0 log 1 z kukk displaystyle 1 z u e u log 1 z sum k 0 infty log 1 z k frac u k k nbsp it follows that n k s n k znn log 1 z kk displaystyle sum n k infty s n k frac z n n frac log 1 z k k nbsp and n k nk znn log 1 z kk displaystyle sum n k infty left n atop k right frac z n n frac log 1 z k k nbsp This identity is valid for formal power series and the sum converges in the complex plane for z lt 1 Other identities arise by exchanging the order of summation taking derivatives making substitutions for z or u etc For example we may derive 12 logm 1 z 1 z m k 0 s k 1 m 1 zkk m 1 2 3 z lt 1 displaystyle frac log m 1 z 1 z m sum k 0 infty frac s k 1 m 1 z k k qquad m 1 2 3 ldots quad z lt 1 nbsp or n i ni n n z i 1 i 1 2 3 displaystyle sum n i infty frac left n atop i right n n zeta i 1 qquad i 1 2 3 ldots nbsp and n i ni n v n z i 1 v i 1 2 3 ℜ v gt 0 displaystyle sum n i infty frac left n atop i right n v n zeta i 1 v qquad i 1 2 3 ldots quad Re v gt 0 nbsp where z k displaystyle zeta k nbsp and z k v displaystyle zeta k v nbsp are the Riemann zeta function and the Hurwitz zeta function respectively and even evaluate this integral 01logz 1 x xkdx 1 zG z 1 k 1 r 1k 1s k 1 r m 0r rm k 2 r mz z 1 m ℜ z gt k 1 k 3 4 5 displaystyle int 0 1 frac log z 1 x x k dx frac 1 z Gamma z 1 k 1 sum r 1 k 1 s k 1 r sum m 0 r binom r m k 2 r m zeta z 1 m qquad Re z gt k 1 quad k 3 4 5 ldots nbsp where G z displaystyle Gamma z nbsp is the gamma function There also exist more complicated expressions for the zeta functions involving the Stirling numbers One for example has z s v k s k k n 0 1 n k n kn l 0n k 1 1 l n k 1l l v k s k 1 2 3 displaystyle zeta s v frac k s k k sum n 0 infty frac 1 n k left n k atop n right sum l 0 n k 1 1 l binom n k 1 l l v k s quad k 1 2 3 ldots nbsp This series generalizes Hasse s series for the Hurwitz zeta function we obtain Hasse s series by setting k 1 13 14 Asymptotics edit The next estimate given in terms of the Euler gamma constant applies 15 n 1k 1 n n k g ln n k uniformly for k o ln n displaystyle left begin matrix n 1 k 1 end matrix right underset n to infty sim frac n k left gamma ln n right k text uniformly for k o ln n nbsp For fixed n displaystyle n nbsp we have the following estimate n kk k k2n2nn displaystyle left begin matrix n k k end matrix right underset k to infty sim frac k 2n 2 n n nbsp Explicit formula edit It is well known that we don t know any one sum formula for Stirling numbers of the first kind A two sum formula can be obtained using one of the symmetric formulae for Stirling numbers in conjunction with the explicit formula for Stirling numbers of the second kind nk j n2n k j 1k 1 2n kj m 0j n 1 m n kmj km j n m displaystyle left n atop k right sum j n 2n k binom j 1 k 1 binom 2n k j sum m 0 j n frac 1 m n k m j k m j n m nbsp As discussed earlier by Vieta s formulas one get nk 0 i1 lt lt in k lt ni1i2 in k displaystyle left begin matrix n k end matrix right sum 0 leq i 1 lt ldots lt i n k lt n i 1 i 2 cdots i n k nbsp The Stirling number s n n p can be found from the formula 16 s n n p 1 n p 1 0 k1 kp 1pmkm p 1 K n K 1 k1 k2 kp 2 k13 k2 p 1 kp displaystyle begin aligned s n n p amp frac 1 n p 1 sum 0 leq k 1 ldots k p sum 1 p mk m p 1 K frac n K 1 k 1 k 2 cdots k p 2 k 1 3 k 2 cdots p 1 k p end aligned nbsp where K k1 kp displaystyle K k 1 cdots k p nbsp The sum is a sum over all partitions of p Another exact nested sum expansion for these Stirling numbers is computed by elementary symmetric polynomials corresponding to the coefficients in x displaystyle x nbsp of a product of the form 1 c1x 1 cn 1x displaystyle 1 c 1 x cdots 1 c n 1 x nbsp In particular we see that nk 1 xk x 1 x 2 x n 1 n 1 xk x 1 x2 1 xn 1 1 1 i1 lt lt ik lt n n 1 i1 ik displaystyle begin aligned left n atop k 1 right amp x k x 1 x 2 cdots x n 1 n 1 cdot x k x 1 left frac x 2 1 right cdots left frac x n 1 1 right amp sum 1 leq i 1 lt cdots lt i k lt n frac n 1 i 1 cdots i k end aligned nbsp Newton s identities combined with the above expansions may be used to give an alternate proof of the weighted expansions involving the generalized harmonic numbers already noted above Relations to natural logarithm function edit The nth derivative of the mth power of the natural logarithm involves the signed Stirling numbers of the first kind dn ln x mdxn x n k 1nmk s n n k 1 ln x m k displaystyle operatorname d n ln x mu over operatorname d x n x n sum k 1 n mu underline k s n n k 1 ln x mu k nbsp where mi displaystyle mu underline i nbsp is the falling factorial and s n n k 1 displaystyle s n n k 1 nbsp is the signed Stirling number It can be proved by using mathematical induction Other formulas edit Stirling numbers of the first kind appear in the formula for Gregory coefficients and in a finite sum identity involving Bell number 17 n Gn l 0ns n l l 1 displaystyle n G n sum l 0 n frac s n l l 1 nbsp j 0n nj Bjkn j i 0k ki Bn i 1 k i displaystyle sum j 0 n binom n j B j k n j sum i 0 k left k atop i right B n i 1 k i nbsp Infinite series involving the finite sums with the Stirling numbers often lead to the special functions For example 12 18 ln G z z 12 ln z z 12ln 2p 1p n 1 1n n l 0 n 2 1 l 2l 2pz 2l 1 n2l 1 displaystyle ln Gamma z left z frac 1 2 right ln z z frac 1 2 ln 2 pi frac 1 pi sum n 1 infty frac 1 n cdot n sum l 0 lfloor n 2 rfloor frac 1 l 2l 2 pi z 2l 1 left n atop 2l 1 right nbsp andPS z ln z 12z 1pz n 1 1n n l 0 n 2 1 l 2l 1 2pz 2l 1 n2l 1 displaystyle Psi z ln z frac 1 2z frac 1 pi z sum n 1 infty frac 1 n cdot n sum l 0 lfloor n 2 rfloor frac 1 l 2l 1 2 pi z 2l 1 left n atop 2l 1 right nbsp or evengm 12dm 0 1 mm p n 1 1n n k 0 n 2 1 k 2p 2k 1 2k 2m 1 n2k 1 displaystyle gamma m frac 1 2 delta m 0 frac 1 m m pi sum n 1 infty frac 1 n cdot n sum k 0 lfloor n 2 rfloor frac 1 k 2 pi 2k 1 left 2k 2 atop m 1 right left n atop 2k 1 right nbsp where gm are the Stieltjes constants and dm 0 represents the Kronecker delta function Notice that this last identity immediately implies relations between the polylogarithm functions the Stirling number exponential generating functions given above and the Stirling number based power series for the generalized Nielsen polylogarithm functions Generalizations editThere are many notions of generalized Stirling numbers that may be defined depending on application in a number of differing combinatorial contexts In so much as the Stirling numbers of the first kind correspond to the coefficients of the distinct polynomial expansions of the single factorial function n n n 1 n 2 2 1 displaystyle n n n 1 n 2 cdots 2 cdot 1 nbsp we may extend this notion to define triangular recurrence relations for more general classes of products In particular for any fixed arithmetic function f N C displaystyle f mathbb N rightarrow mathbb C nbsp and symbolic parameters x t displaystyle x t nbsp related generalized factorial products of the form x n f t k 1n 1 x f k tk displaystyle x n f t prod k 1 n 1 left x frac f k t k right nbsp may be studied from the point of view of the classes of generalized Stirling numbers of the first kind defined by the following coefficients of the powers of x displaystyle x nbsp in the expansions of x n f t displaystyle x n f t nbsp and then by the next corresponding triangular recurrence relation nk f t xk 1 x n f t f n 1 t1 n n 1k f t n 1k 1 f t dn 0dk 0 displaystyle begin aligned left begin matrix n k end matrix right f t amp x k 1 x n f t amp f n 1 t 1 n left begin matrix n 1 k end matrix right f t left begin matrix n 1 k 1 end matrix right f t delta n 0 delta k 0 end aligned nbsp These coefficients satisfy a number of analogous properties to those for the Stirling numbers of the first kind as well as recurrence relations and functional equations related to the f harmonic numbers Fn r t k ntk f k r displaystyle F n r t sum k leq n t k f k r nbsp 19 One special case of these bracketed coefficients corresponding to t 1 displaystyle t equiv 1 nbsp allows us to expand the multiple factorial or multifactorial functions as polynomials in n displaystyle n nbsp see generalizations of the double factorial 20 The Stirling numbers of both kinds the binomial coefficients and the first and second order Eulerian numbers are all defined by special cases of a triangular super recurrence of the form nk an bk g n 1k a n b k g n 1k 1 dn 0dk 0 displaystyle left begin matrix n k end matrix right alpha n beta k gamma left begin matrix n 1 k end matrix right alpha prime n beta prime k gamma prime left begin matrix n 1 k 1 end matrix right delta n 0 delta k 0 nbsp for integers n k 0 displaystyle n k geq 0 nbsp and where nk 0 displaystyle left begin matrix n k end matrix right equiv 0 nbsp whenever n lt 0 displaystyle n lt 0 nbsp or k lt 0 displaystyle k lt 0 nbsp In this sense the form of the Stirling numbers of the first kind may also be generalized by this parameterized super recurrence for fixed scalars a b g a b g displaystyle alpha beta gamma alpha prime beta prime gamma prime nbsp not all zero See also editStirling numbers Stirling numbers of the second kind Stirling polynomials Random permutation statisticsReferences edit Renyi Alfred 1962 Theorie des elements saillants d une suite d observations Annales scientifiques de l Universite de Clermont Mathematiques Tome 8 2 7 13 See section 6 2 and 6 5 of Concrete Mathematics Richard P Stanley Enumerative Combinatorics volume 1 2nd ed Page 34 of the online version Adamchik V 1996 On Stirling numbers and Euler sums PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Flajolet and Sedgewick 1995 Mellin transforms and asymptotics Finite differences and Rice s integrals PDF Theoretical Computer Science 144 1 2 101 124 doi 10 1016 0304 3975 94 00281 m Schmidt M D 30 October 2016 Zeta Series Generating Function Transformations Related to Polylogarithm Functions and the k Order Harmonic Numbers arXiv 1610 09666 math CO Schmidt M D 3 November 2016 Zeta Series Generating Function Transformations Related to Generalized Stirling Numbers and Partial Sums of the Hurwitz Zeta Function arXiv 1611 00957 math CO A table of the second order Eulerian numbers and a synopsis of their properties is found in section 6 2 of Concrete Mathematics For example we have that k nk 2n 1 2n 3 1 2n 1 displaystyle sum k left langle left langle n atop k right rangle right rangle 2n 1 2n 3 cdots 1 2n 1 nbsp These numbers also have the following combinatorial interpretation If we form all permutations of the multiset 1 1 2 2 n n displaystyle 1 1 2 2 ldots n n nbsp with the property that all numbers between the two occurrences of k displaystyle k nbsp are greater than k displaystyle k nbsp for 1 k n displaystyle 1 leq k leq n nbsp then nk displaystyle left langle left langle n atop k right rangle right rangle nbsp is the number of such permutations that have k displaystyle k nbsp ascents Schmidt M D 2016 A Computer Algebra Package for Polynomial Sequence Recognition arXiv 1609 07301 math CO Herbert Wilf Generatingfunctionology Section 4 6 Schmidt M D 2017 Jacobi Type Continued Fractions for the Ordinary Generating Functions of Generalized Factorial Functions J Integer Seq 20 3 arXiv 1610 09691 a b Ia V Blagouchine 2016 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 Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications 442 2 404 434 arXiv 1408 3902 doi 10 1016 j jmaa 2016 04 032 S2CID 119661147 arXiv Blagouchine Iaroslav V 2018 Three Notes on Ser s and Hasse s Representations for the Zeta functions INTEGERS The Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory 18A 1 45 arXiv 1606 02044 Bibcode 2016arXiv160602044B See also some more interesting series representations and expansions mentioned in Connon s article Connon D F 2007 Some series and integrals involving the Riemann zeta function binomial coefficients and the harmonic numbers Volume I arXiv 0710 4022 math HO These estimates are found in Section 26 8 of the NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions J Malenfant Finite Closed form Expressions for the Partition Function and for Euler Bernoulli and Stirling Numbers Komatsu Takao Pita Ruiz Claudio 2018 Some formulas for Bell numbers Filomat 32 11 3881 3889 doi 10 2298 FIL1811881K ISSN 0354 5180 Ia V Blagouchine 2016 Expansions of generalized Euler s constants into the series of polynomials in p 2 and into the formal enveloping series with rational coefficients only Journal of Number Theory 158 2 365 396 doi 10 1016 j jnt 2015 06 012 arXiv Combinatorial Identities for Generalized Stirling Numbers Expanding f Factorial Functions and the f Harmonic Numbers 2016 Schmidt Maxie D 2010 Generalized j Factorial Functions Polynomials and Applications J Integer Seq 13 The Art of Computer Programming Concrete Mathematics M Abramowitz I Stegun ed 1972 24 1 3 Stirling Numbers of the First Kind Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas Graphs and Mathematical Tables 9th ed New York Dover p 824 Stirling numbers of the first kind s n k at PlanetMath Sloane N J A ed Sequence A008275 Triangle read by rows of Stirling numbers of first kind The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stirling numbers of the first kind amp oldid 1216533277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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