Binomial
type
Definition
In mathematics,
a polynomial
sequence, i.e., a sequence of polynomials indexed by { 0, 1, 2, 3, ... } in
which the index of each polynomial equals its degree, is said to be of binomial
type if it satisfies the sequence of identities
Many
such sequences exist. The set of all such sequences forms a
Lie
group in a natural way explained below. Every sequence of binomial type is
a
Sheffer
sequence (but most Sheffer sequences are not of binomial type).
Examples
- In consequence of this definition the binomial
theorem can be stated by saying that the sequence { xn
: n = 0, 1, 2, ... } is of binomial type.
- The sequence of "lower
factorials" is defined by
(In the theory of special functions,
this same notation denotes upper factorials, but this present usage is universal
among combinatorialists.)
The product is understood to be 1 if n = 0, since it is in that case
an empty product.
This polynomial sequence is of binomial type.
- Similarly
the "upper factorials"
are a polynomial sequence of binomial
type.
are a polynomial
sequence of binomial type.
where S(n, k)
is the number of partitions of a set of size n into k disjoint
non-empty subsets, is a polynomial sequence of binomial type. Eric
Temple Bell called these the "exponential polynomials" and that term is also
sometimes seen in the literature. The coefficients S(n, k
) are "Stirling numbers of the second kind". This sequence has a curious connection
with the Poisson
distribution: If X is a random
variable with a Poisson distribution with expected value λ then E(Xn)
= pn(λ). In particular, when λ = 1,
we see that the nth moment of the Poisson distribution with expected
value 1 is the number of partitions of a set of size n, called the nth
Bell number. This
fact about the nth moment of that particular Poisson distribution is
"Dobinski's formula".
A simple characterization
It can be shown that a polynomial sequence { pn(x)
: n = 0, 1, 2, ... } is of binomial type if and only if the linear
transformation on the space of polynomials in x that is characterized
by
-
is shift-equivariant and
p0(
x)
= 1 for all
x and
pn(0) = 0 for
n
> 0. (The statement that this operator is shift-equivariant is the same as saying
that the polynomial sequence is a
Sheffer
sequence; the set of sequences of binomial type is properly included within
the set of Sheffer sequences.)
Delta operators
That linear transformation is clearly a delta
operator, i.e., a shift-equivariant linear transformation on the space of
polynomials in x that reduces degrees of polynomials by 1. The most obvious
examples of delta operators are difference operators and differentiation. It can
be shown that every delta operator can be written as a power
series of the form
-
where
D is differentiation
(note that the lower bound of summation is 1). Each delta operator
Q
has a unique sequence of "basic polynomials", i.e., a polynomial sequence satisfying
-
-
-
It was shown in
1973
by
Rota,
Kahaner, and Odlyzko, that a polynomial sequence is of binomial type if and only
if it is the sequence of basic polynomials of some delta operator. Therefore,
this paragraph amounts to a recipe for generating as many polynomial sequences
of binomial type as one may wish.
Umbral
composition of polynomial sequences
The set of all polynomial sequences
of binomial type is a group
in which the group operation is "umbral composition" of polynomial sequences.
That operation is defined as follows. Suppose { pn(x)
: n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ... } and { qn(x) : n = 0, 1, 2,
3, ... } are polynomial sequences, and
-
Then the umbral composition
p o
q is the polynomial sequence whose
nth term is
-
With the delta operator defined by a power series in
D
as above, the natural bijection between delta operators and polynomial sequences
of binomial type, also defined above, is a group isomorphism, in which the group
operation on power series is (perhaps surprisingly) formal composition of formal
power series.
Cumulants and moments
The sequence κn of coefficients of the first-degree
terms in a polynomial sequence of binomial type may be termed the cumulants
of the polynomial sequence. It can be shown that the whole polynomial sequence
of binomial type is determined by its cumulants, in a way discussed in the article
titled cumulant.
Thus
and
These are "formal"
cumulants and "formal"
moments,
as opposed to cumulants of a
probability
distribution and moments of a probability distribution.
Let
be the (formal) cumulant-generating function. Then
is
the delta operator associated with the polynomial sequence, i.e., we have
Applications
The concept of binomial
type has applications in combinatorics,
probability, statistics,
and a variety of other fields.
References
- G.-C.
Rota, D. Kahaner, and A. Odlyzko, "Finite Operator Calculus," Journal
of Mathematical Analysis and its Applications, vol. 42, no. 3, June 1973. Reprinted
in the book with the same title, Academic Press, New York, 1975.
-
R. Mullin and G.-C. Rota, "On the Foundations of Combinatorial Theory III:
Theory of Binomial Enumeration," in Graph Theory and Its Applications,
edited by Bernard Harris, Academic Press, New York, 1970.
As the
title suggests, the second of the above is explicit about applications to
combinatorial
enumeration.