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 in general.)

Definitions

The original definition of Stirling numbers of the first kind was algebraic. These numbers, usually written s(n, k), are signed integers whose sign, positive or negative, depends on the parity of n k. Afterwards, the absolute values of these numbers, |s(n, k)|, which are known as unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind, were found to count permutations, so in combinatorics the (signed) Stirling numbers of the first kind, s(n, k), are often defined as counting numbers multiplied by a sign factor. That is the approach taken on this page.

Most identities on this page are stated for unsigned Stirling numbers. Note that the notations on this page are not universal.

Unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind

s(4,2)=11

The unsigned Stirling numbers of the first kind are denoted in various ways by different authors. Common notations are and . (The last is also common notation for the Gaussian coefficients.) They count the number of permutations of n elements with k 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 .

As a second example, the image at right shows that : the symmetric group on 4 objects has 3 permutations of the form

—2 orbits, each of size 2,

and 8 permutations of the form

—1 orbit of size 3 and 1 orbit of size 1.

The unsigned Stirling numbers also arise as coefficients of the rising factorial, i.e.,

.

Thus, for example, , which matches the computations in the preceding paragraph.

Stirling numbers of the first kind

Stirling numbers of the first kind (sometimes with the qualifying adjective signed) are given by

They are the coefficients in the expansion

where is the falling factorial

Note that

Recurrence relation

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

for , with the initial conditions

for n > 0.

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 xk on the left-hand side of this equation is . The coefficient of xk in n(x)(n) is , while the coefficient of xk in x (x)(n) is . Since the two sides are equal as polynomials, the coefficients of xk 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 objects from a permutation of n 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 n objects with k cycles, and label the objects a1, ..., an, so that the permutation is represented by

To form a new permutation of n + 1 objects and k cycles one must insert the new object into this array. There are n ways to perform this insertion, inserting the new object immediately following any of the n already present. This explains the term of the recurrence relation. These two cases include all possibilities, so the recurrence relation follows.

Table of values for small n and k

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.

n \ k 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
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

Identities involving Stirling numbers of the first kind

Simple identities

Note that although

, we have if n > 0

and

if k > 0, 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.

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:

The three types may be enumerated as follows:

Sum the three contributions to obtain

Other relations

Other relations involving Stirling numbers of the first kind include

where Hn is a harmonic number, and

where Hn(m) is a generalized harmonic number. For a generalization of this relation, see below.

Generating function

A variety of identities may be derived by manipulating the generating function:

Using the equality

it follows that

(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:

and

where is the Riemann zeta function.

Finite sums

A simple sum is

or in a more general relationship,

The identity

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

Explicit formula

The Stirling number s(n,n-p) can be found from the formula[1]

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

See also

References

This article incorporates material from Stirling numbers of the first kind on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

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