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Q-residue of the (n+1)st Fibonacci polynomial, where Q is the triangular array (t(i,j)) given by t(i,j)=1. (See Comments.)
+10
19
1, 1, 3, 5, 15, 33, 91, 221, 583, 1465, 3795, 9653, 24831, 63441, 162763, 416525, 1067575, 2733673, 7003971, 17938661, 45954543, 117709185, 301527355, 772364093, 1978473511
OFFSET
0,3
COMMENTS
Suppose that p=p(0)*x^n+p(1)*x^(n-1)+...+p(n-1)*x+p(n) is a polynomial of positive degree and that Q is a sequence of polynomials: q(k,x)=t(k,0)*x^k+t(k,1)*x^(k-1)+...+t(k,k-1)*x+t(k,k), for k=0,1,2,... The Q-downstep of p is the polynomial given by D(p)=p(0)*q(n-1,x)+p(1)*q(n-2,x)+...+p(n-1)*q(0,x)+p(n).
Since degree(D(p))<degree(p), the result of n applications of D is a constant, which we call the Q-residue of p. If p is a constant to begin with, we define D(p)=p.
Example: let p(x)=2*x^3+3*x^2+4*x+5 and q(k,x)=(x+1)^k.
D(p)=2(x+1)^2+3(x+1)+4(1)+5=2x^2+7x+14
D(D(p))=2(x+1)+7(1)+14=2x+23
D(D(D(p)))=2(1)+23=25;
the Q-residue of p is 25.
We may regard the sequence Q of polynomials as the triangular array formed by coefficients:
t(0,0)
t(1,0)....t(1,1)
t(2,0)....t(2,1)....t(2,2)
t(3,0)....t(3,1)....t(3,2)....t(3,3)
and regard p as the vector (p(0),p(1),...,p(n)). If P is a sequence of polynomials [or triangular array having (row n)=(p(0),p(1),...,p(n))], then the Q-residues of the polynomials form a numerical sequence.
Following are examples in which Q is the triangle given by t(i,j)=1 for 0<=i<=j:
Q.....P...................Q-residue of P
1.....1...................A000079, 2^n
1....(x+1)^n..............A007051, (1+3^n)/2
1....(x+2)^n..............A034478, (1+5^n)/2
1....(x+3)^n..............A034494, (1+7^n)/2
1....(2x+1)^n.............A007582
1....(3x+1)^n.............A081186
1....(2x+3)^n.............A081342
1....(3x+2)^n.............A081336
1.....A040310.............A193649
1....(x+1)^n+(x-1)^n)/2...A122983
1....(x+2)(x+1)^(n-1).....A057198
1....(1,2,3,4,...,n)......A002064
1....(1,1,2,3,4,...,n)....A048495
1....(n,n+1,...,2n).......A087323
1....(n+1,n+2,...,2n+1)...A099035
1....p(n,k)=(2^(n-k))*3^k.A085350
1....p(n,k)=(3^(n-k))*2^k.A090040
1....A008288 (Delannoy)...A193653
1....A054142..............A101265
1....cyclotomic...........A193650
1....(x+1)(x+2)...(x+n)...A193651
1....A114525..............A193662
More examples:
Q...........P.............Q-residue of P
(x+1)^n...(x+1)^n.........A000110, Bell numbers
(x+1)^n...(x+2)^n.........A126390
(x+2)^n...(x+1)^n.........A028361
(x+2)^n...(x+2)^n.........A126443
(x+1)^n.....1.............A005001
(x+2)^n.....1.............A193660
A094727.....1.............A193657
(k+1).....(k+1)...........A001906 (even-ind. Fib. nos.)
(k+1).....(x+1)^n.........A112091
(x+1)^n...(k+1)...........A029761
(k+1)......A049310........A193663
(In these last four, (k+1) represents the triangle t(n,k)=k+1, 0<=k<=n.)
A051162...(x+1)^n.........A193658
A094727...(x+1)^n.........A193659
A049310...(x+1)^n.........A193664
Changing the notation slightly leads to the Mathematica program below and the following formulation for the Q-downstep of p: first, write t(n,k) as q(n,k). Define r(k)=Sum{q(k-1,i)*r(k-1-i) : i=0,1,...,k-1} Then row n of D(p) is given by v(n)=Sum{p(n,k)*r(n-k) : k=0,1,...,n}.
FORMULA
Conjecture: G.f.: -(1+x)*(2*x-1) / ( (x-1)*(4*x^2+x-1) ). - R. J. Mathar, Feb 19 2015
EXAMPLE
First five rows of Q, coefficients of Fibonacci polynomials (A049310):
1
1...0
1...0...1
1...0...2...0
1...0...3...0...1
To obtain a(4)=15, downstep four times:
D(x^4+3*x^2+1)=(x^3+x^2+x+1)+3(x+1)+1: (1,1,4,5) [coefficients]
DD(x^4+3*x^2+1)=D(1,1,4,5)=(1,2,11)
DDD(x^4+3*x^2+1)=D(1,2,11)=(1,14)
DDDD(x^4+3*x^2+1)=D(1,14)=15.
MATHEMATICA
q[n_, k_] := 1;
r[0] = 1; r[k_] := Sum[q[k - 1, i] r[k - 1 - i], {i, 0, k - 1}];
f[n_, x_] := Fibonacci[n + 1, x];
p[n_, k_] := Coefficient[f[n, x], x, k]; (* A049310 *)
v[n_] := Sum[p[n, k] r[n - k], {k, 0, n}]
Table[v[n], {n, 0, 24}] (* A193649 *)
TableForm[Table[q[i, k], {i, 0, 4}, {k, 0, i}]]
Table[r[k], {k, 0, 8}] (* 2^k *)
TableForm[Table[p[n, k], {n, 0, 6}, {k, 0, n}]]
CROSSREFS
Cf. A192872 (polynomial reduction), A193091 (polynomial augmentation), A193722 (the upstep operation and fusion of polynomial sequences or triangular arrays).
KEYWORD
nonn
AUTHOR
Clark Kimberling, Aug 02 2011
STATUS
approved
a(n) = F(n)^2 - F(n-1)^2 or F(n+1) * F(n-2) where F(n) = A000045(n), the Fibonacci numbers.
+10
11
1, 0, 3, 5, 16, 39, 105, 272, 715, 1869, 4896, 12815, 33553, 87840, 229971, 602069, 1576240, 4126647, 10803705, 28284464, 74049691, 193864605, 507544128, 1328767775, 3478759201, 9107509824, 23843770275, 62423800997, 163427632720, 427859097159, 1120149658761
OFFSET
1,3
COMMENTS
A001519(n)^2 = A079472(n)^2 + a(n)^2 and (A001519(n), A079472(n), a(n)) is a Pythagorean triple.
INVERT transform is A052156. PSUM transform is A007598. SUMADJ transform is A088305. BINOMIAL transform is A039717. BINOMIAL transform with 0 prepended is A112091 with 0 prepended. BINOMIAL transform inverse is A084179(n+1).
LINKS
John P. Bonomo and Montana Ferita, A Small Fib, College Math. J., 2023.
Nurettin Irmak, Product of arbitrary Fibonacci numbers with distance 1 to Fibonomial coefficient, Turk J Math, (2017) 41: 825-828. See p. 828.
FORMULA
G.f.: x * (1 - x)^2 / ((1 + x) * (1 -3*x + x^2)).
a(n) = 2*a(n-1) + 2*a(n-2) - a(n-3).
a(n) = - A121646(n).
a(n) = -a(1-n) for all n in Z.
a(n) = A121801(n+1) / 2. - Michael Somos, Jun 17 2014
a(n) = a(n-1) + A000045(n-1)^2 - 2*(-1)^n, for n>1. - Alexander Samokrutov, Sep 07 2015
a(n) = F(n-1)*F(n) - (-1)^n. - Bruno Berselli, Oct 30 2015
a(n) = 2^(-1-n)*(-(-1)^n*2^(3+n)-(3-sqrt(5))^n*(1+sqrt(5))+(-1+sqrt(5))*(3+sqrt(5))^n)/5. - Colin Barker, Sep 28 2016
From Amiram Eldar, Oct 06 2020: (Start)
Sum_{n>=3} 1/a(n) = (1/2) * A290565 - 1/4.
Sum_{n>=3} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = (3/2) * (1/phi - 1/2), where phi is the golden ratio (A001622). (End)
EXAMPLE
G.f. = x + 3*x^3 + 5*x^4 + 16*x^5 + 39*x^6 + 105*x^7 + 272*x^8 + 715*x^9 + ...
MAPLE
a:= n-> (<<0|1|0>, <0|0|1>, <-1|2|2>>^n. <<1, 0, 3>>)[1, 1]:
seq(a(n), n=0..30); # Alois P. Heinz, Sep 28 2016
MATHEMATICA
a[ n_] := Fibonacci[n + 1] Fibonacci[n - 2]; (* Michael Somos, Jun 17 2014 *)
CoefficientList[Series[(1 - x)^2/((1 + x) (1 - 3 x + x^2)), {x, 0, 30}], x] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Jun 17 2014 *)
PROG
(Magma) [Fibonacci(n)^2-Fibonacci(n-1)^2: n in [1..40]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Jun 18 2014
(PARI) {a(n) = fibonacci( n + 1) * fibonacci( n - 2)};
(PARI) a(n) = round(2^(-1-n)*(-(-1)^n*2^(3+n)-(3-sqrt(5))^n*(1+sqrt(5))+(-1+sqrt(5))*(3+sqrt(5))^n)/5) \\ Colin Barker, Sep 28 2016
(PARI) lista(nn) = {my(p = (3*x-1)/(x^3-2*x^2-2*x+1)); for (n=1, nn, p = deriv(p, x); print1(subst(p, x, 0)/n!, ", "); ); } \\ Michel Marcus, May 22 2018
CROSSREFS
Cf. similar sequences of the type k*F(n)*F(n+1)+(-1)^n listed in A264080.
Cf. A260259: numbers of the form F(n)*F(n+1)-(-1)^n. - Bruno Berselli, Nov 02 2015
KEYWORD
nonn,easy
AUTHOR
Michael Somos, Jun 06 2013
STATUS
approved

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