Let k be a integer. How can we compute the close formula for <munderover> &#x2211;<!-- ∑ -->

Celia Lucas

Celia Lucas

Answered question

2022-06-16

Let k be a integer. How can we compute the close formula for
m = 0 k ( m + 1 ) ( m + 2 ) ( 2 m + 3 ) ( 3 m + 4 ) ( 3 m + 5 ) ?

Answer & Explanation

Myla Pierce

Myla Pierce

Beginner2022-06-17Added 20 answers

We can expand the polynomial we are summing over to give a degree 5 polynomial in k, as follows:
( m + 1 ) ( m + 2 ) ( 2 m + 3 ) ( 3 m + 4 ) ( 3 m + 5 ) = 18 m 5 + 135 m 4 + 400 m 3 + 585 m 2 + 422 m + 120
Therefore, we can write the summation as:
18 m = 0 k m 5 + 135 m = 0 k m 4 + 400 m = 0 k m 3 + 585 m = 0 k m 2 + 422 m = 0 k m + 120 m = 0 k 1
We can therefore compute the final answer without much difficulty using standard results:
m = 0 k m 5 = k 2 ( 2 k 2 + 2 k 1 ) ( k + 1 ) 2 12
m = 0 k m 4 = k ( 2 k + 1 ) ( k + 1 ) ( 3 k 2 + 3 k 1 ) 30
m = 0 k m 3 = k 2 ( k + 1 ) 2 4
m = 0 k m 2 = k ( k + 1 ) ( 2 k + 1 ) 6
m = 0 k m = k ( k + 1 ) 2
m = 0 k 1 = k + 1
Combining all these, we have the following simplified expression:
( k + 2 ) 2 ( 3 k 4 + 24 k 3 + 67 k 2 + 76 k + 30 )
Testing for a few simple test cases:
k = 1 : 1800 k = 2 : 11040 k = 4 : 133560
These correspond to what we get if we compute the summation by hand, so this is our final closed form.

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?