Using generating functions one can see that the n t h </mrow>

enrotlavaec

enrotlavaec

Answered question

2022-06-23

Using generating functions one can see that the n t h Bell number, i.e., the number of all possible partitions of a set of n elements, is equal to E ( X n ) where X is a Poisson random variable with mean 1. Is there a way to explain this connection intuitively?

Answer & Explanation

svirajueh

svirajueh

Beginner2022-06-24Added 29 answers

1. B n = k = 0 n { n k } , where { n k } is a Stirling number of the second kind. (The number { n k } counts the number of ways to partition a set of n elements into k sets.)
2. Stirling numbers of the second kind are used to convert ordinary powers to falling powers via x n = k = 0 n x k _ { n k } , where x n _ = x ( x 1 ) ( x 2 ) ( x n + 1 ).
3. The factorial moments of a Poisson ( 1 ) distribution are all 1; i.e., E [ X n _ ] = 1.
E [ X n ] = k = 0 n E [ X k _ ] { n k } = k = 0 n { n k } = B n .
Facts 1 and 2 are well-known properties of the Bell and Stirling numbers. Here is a quick proof of #3. The second step is the definition of expected value, using the Poisson probability mass function. The second-to-last step is the Maclaurin series expansion for e x evaluated at 1.
E [ X n _ ] = E [ X ( X 1 ) ( X 2 ) ( X n + 1 ) ] = x = 0 x ( x 1 ) ( x n + 1 ) e 1 x !
= x = n x ( x 1 ) ( x n + 1 ) e 1 x ! = x = n x ! ( x n ) ! e 1 x ! = y = 0 e 1 y ! = e / e = 1.

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