Sum of the first n quadratic integers To prove

Nadia Clayton

Nadia Clayton

Answered question

2022-04-02

Sum of the first n quadratic integers
To prove that
S=k=1nk2=n(2n+1)(n+1)6

Answer & Explanation

Alannah Farmer

Alannah Farmer

Beginner2022-04-03Added 11 answers

In mathematics, good things happen when you can evaluate something in two different ways. The telescoping series
S1=k=0n(k1)3k3,
can be evaluated using the 'method of differences', where most of the terms are cancelled out. This tells us that
S1=n3.
However, we also know that
S1=k=0n3k2+3k1. (*)
which expresses S1 in terms of the unknown S=k=1nk2.
Because we already know that S1=n3 using the method of differences, we can rearrange (*) to make S the subject of the equation and solve.
The same principle applies when computing series such as k=1nk3: because we can evaluate k=1n(k1)4k4 in two different ways, this gives us enough information to find k=1nk3.
horieblersee275

horieblersee275

Beginner2022-04-04Added 17 answers

This is a more general answer than what you are actually asking.
The reason is for me as follows: you only know the sums for ell<ell0, and you want to calculate
k=1nkell0
The terms in (k+1)ell0+1kell0+1 are all of the form αellkell with ellell0 so you know how to calculate each
αellk=1nkellell<ell0
Except αell0k=1nkell0
Moreover, k=1n((k+1)ell0+1kell0+1 is a telescoping sum so it is really easy to calculate.
You can see that
k=1n((k+1)ell0+1kell0+1)=(n+1)ell0+11
Therefore it gives you enough information to determine,
k=1nkell0

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