PH indicator
In mathematics, Lah numbers, discovered by Ivo Lah in 1955,[1] are coefficients expressing rising factorials in terms of falling factorials.
Unsigned Lah numbers have an interesting meaning in combinatorics: they count the number of ways a set of n elements can be partitioned into k nonempty linearly ordered subsets. Lah numbers are related to Stirling numbers.
Unsigned Lah numbers:
Signed Lah numbers:
L(n, 1) is always n!; using the interpretation above, the only partition of {1, 2, 3} into 1 set can have its set ordered in 6 ways:
- {(1, 2, 3)}, {(1, 3, 2)}, {(2, 1, 3)}, {(2, 3, 1)}, {(3, 1, 2)} or {(3, 2, 1)}
L(3, 2) corresponds to the 6 partitions with two ordered parts:
- {(1), (2, 3)}, {(1), (3, 2)}, {(2), (1, 3)}, {(2), (3, 1)}, {(3), (1, 2)} or {(3), (2, 1)}
L(n, n) is always 1; e.g., partitioning {1, 2, 3} into 3 non-empty subsets results in subsets of length 1.
- {(1), (2), (3)}
Paraphrasing Karamata-Knuth notation for Stirling numbers, it was proposed to use the following alternative notation for Lah numbers:
Rising and falling factorials
Let represent the rising factorial and let represent the falling factorial .
Compare the third row of the table of values.
Identities and relations
- with the Stirling numbers of the first kind, the Stirling numbers of the second kind and with the conventions and if .
Table of values
Below is a table of values for the Lah numbers:
See also
References
- ↑ Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis Princeton University Press (1958, reissue 1980) ISBN 978-0-691-02365-6 (reprinted again in 2002, by Courier Dover Publications).