Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Bernoulli number
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
=== Early history === The Bernoulli numbers are rooted in the early history of the computation of sums of integer powers, which have been of interest to mathematicians since antiquity. [[File:Seki Kowa Katsuyo Sampo Bernoulli numbers.png|thumb|right|A page from [[Seki Takakazu]]'s ''KatsuyΕ SanpΕ'' (1712), tabulating binomial coefficients and Bernoulli numbers]] Methods to calculate the sum of the first {{mvar|n}} positive integers, the sum of the squares and of the cubes of the first {{mvar|n}} positive integers were known, but there were no real 'formulas', only descriptions given entirely in words. Among the great mathematicians of antiquity to consider this problem were [[Pythagoras]] (c. 572β497 BCE, Greece), [[Archimedes]] (287β212 BCE, Italy), [[Aryabhata]] (b. 476, India), [[Abu Bakr al-Karaji]] (d. 1019, Persia) and Abu Ali al-Hasan ibn al-Hasan ibn [[al-Haytham]] (965β1039, Iraq). During the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries mathematicians made significant progress. In the West [[Thomas Harriot]] (1560β1621) of England, [[Johann Faulhaber]] (1580β1635) of Germany, [[Pierre de Fermat]] (1601β1665) and fellow French mathematician [[Blaise Pascal]] (1623β1662) all played important roles. Thomas Harriot seems to have been the first to derive and write formulas for sums of powers using symbolic notation, but even he calculated only up to the sum of the fourth powers. Johann Faulhaber gave formulas for sums of powers up to the 17th power in his 1631 ''Academia Algebrae'', far higher than anyone before him, but he did not give a general formula. Blaise Pascal in 1654 proved [[Faulhaber's formula|''Pascal's identity'']] relating {{math|(''n''+1)<sup>''k''+1</sup>}} to the sums of the {{math|''p''}}th powers of the first {{math|''n''}} positive integers for {{math|''p'' {{=}} 0, 1, 2, ..., ''k''}}. The Swiss mathematician Jakob Bernoulli (1654β1705) was the first to realize the existence of a single sequence of constants {{math|''B''<sub>0</sub>, ''B''<sub>1</sub>, ''B''<sub>2</sub>,...}} which provide a uniform formula for all sums of powers.{{sfnp|Knuth|1993}} The joy Bernoulli experienced when he hit upon the pattern needed to compute quickly and easily the coefficients of his formula for the sum of the {{mvar|c}}th powers for any positive integer {{math|''c''}} can be seen from his comment. He wrote: :"With the help of this table, it took me less than half of a quarter of an hour to find that the tenth powers of the first 1000 numbers being added together will yield the sum 91,409,924,241,424,243,424,241,924,242,500." Bernoulli's result was published posthumously in ''[[Ars Conjectandi]]'' in 1713. [[Seki Takakazu]] independently discovered the Bernoulli numbers and his result was published a year earlier, also posthumously, in 1712.{{r|Selin1997_891}} However, Seki did not present his method as a formula based on a sequence of constants. Bernoulli's formula for sums of powers is the most useful and generalizable formulation to date. The coefficients in Bernoulli's formula are now called Bernoulli numbers, following a suggestion of [[Abraham de Moivre]]. Bernoulli's formula is sometimes called [[Faulhaber's formula]] after Johann Faulhaber who found remarkable ways to calculate sum of powers but never stated Bernoulli's formula. According to Knuth{{sfnp|Knuth|1993}} a rigorous proof of Faulhaber's formula was first published by [[Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi|Carl Jacobi]] in 1834.{{r|Jacobi1834}} Knuth's in-depth study of Faulhaber's formula concludes (the nonstandard notation on the LHS is explained further on): :''"Faulhaber never discovered the Bernoulli numbers; i.e., he never realized that a single sequence of constants'' {{math|''B''<sub>0</sub>, ''B''<sub>1</sub>, ''B''<sub>2</sub>,}} ''... would provide a uniform'' ::<math display=inline>\sum n^m = \frac 1{m+1}\left( B_0n^{m+1}-\binom{m+1} 1 B_1 n^m+\binom{m+1} 2B_2n^{m-1}-\cdots +(-1)^m\binom{m+1}mB_mn\right) </math> :''for all sums of powers. He never mentioned, for example, the fact that almost half of the coefficients turned out to be zero after he had converted his formulas for'' {{math|Ξ£ ''n<sup>m</sup>''}} ''from polynomials in {{mvar|N}} to polynomials in {{mvar|n}}."{{sfnp|Knuth|1993|p=14}}'' In the above Knuth meant <math>B_1^-</math>; instead using <math>B_1^+</math> the formula avoids subtraction: :<math display=inline> \sum n^m = \frac 1{m+1}\left( B_0n^{m+1}+\binom{m+1} 1 B^+_1 n^m+\binom{m+1} 2B_2n^{m-1}+\cdots+\binom{m+1}mB_mn\right). </math>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)