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Closed form for $\sum\limits_{k=0}^{n} [\operatorname{wt}(k) = m]$ where $\operatorname{wt}(n)$ is the binary weight of $n$

Let $\operatorname{wt}(n)$ be A000120 (i.e., number of $1$'s in binary expansion of $n$). Let $a(n,m)$ be the family of integer sequences such that $$ a(n,m) = \sum\limits_{k=0}^{n} [\operatorname{wt}(...
Notamathematician's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
169 views

Partial sums of binomial coefficients and related family of polynomials

Let $a(n)$ be A302117. Here $$ a(n) = 4(n-1)a(n-1) - \frac{1}{3}\prod\limits_{k=0}^{n-1}(2k-3), \\ a(0) = 0. $$ Let $$ T(n,k) = \sum\limits_{i=0}^{k} \binom{n}{i}. $$ Let $P_n(z)$ be the family of ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
752 views

For all $n\in \mathbb{N}$, How to find $\min\{ m+k\}$ such that $ \binom{m}{k}=n$?

I asked this question on MSE here. Most numbers in pascal triangle appear only once (excluding the duplicates in the same row of the Pascal's triangle) but certain numbers appear multiple times. ...
pie's user avatar
  • 541
1 vote
0 answers
73 views

Alternating sum of integer coefficients of the triangles related to Eulerian numbers and binomial transforms

Let $W(n, k, m)$ be an integer coefficients defined for $n > 0, 1 \leqslant k \leqslant n, m > 0$ with $W(n,k,m)=0$ for $n \leqslant 0$ or $k \leqslant 0$ such that $$ W(n, k, m) = (k+m-1)W(n-1,...
Notamathematician's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
527 views

Suitable closed form for the A079501

Let $a(n)$ be A079501 (i.e., number of compositions of the integer $n$ with strictly smallest part in the first position). The sequence begins with $$ 1, 1, 2, 2, 4, 5, 8, 12, 19, 28, 45, 70, 110, ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
13 votes
1 answer
468 views

Four new series for $\pi$ and related identities involving harmonic numbers

Recently, I discovered the following four new (conjectural) series for $\pi$: \begin{align}\sum_{k=1}^\infty\frac{(5k^2-4k+1)8^k\binom{3k}k}{k(3k-1)(3k-2)\binom{2k}k\binom{4k}{2k}}&=\frac{3\pi}2,\...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
1 vote
0 answers
95 views

On level-$12$ of the McKay-Thompson series of the Monster and the Domb numbers

(This continues from level 10.) Given some moonshine functions $j_{N}$. There are nice descending and consistent relations for levels $6m$ with $m= 2,3,5,$ $$j_{12A} = \left(\sqrt{j_{12H}} + \frac{\...
Tito Piezas III's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
116 views

On level $6$ of the McKay–Thompson series of the Monster and Apéry numbers, et al

After the McKay–Thompson series of levels $1$, $2$, $3$, $4$ of the Monster were mentioned in this MO post, level $6$ has very interesting relations as well. (Level 10 is in this post.) I. Level-6 ...
Tito Piezas III's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
70 views

Integer coefficients such that $T(n,k)=R(n,k)-R(n,k-1)$

Let $a(n)$ be A000085, i.e., the number of self-inverse permutations on $n$ letters, also known as involutions; number of standard Young tableaux with $n$ cells. Here $$a(n) = a(n-1) + (n-1)a(n-2), a(...
Notamathematician's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
434 views

Series for $\frac{\log m}{\pi}$ with summands involving harmonic numbers

The classical rational Ramanujan-type series for $1/\pi$ have the following four forms: \begin{align}\sum_{k=0}^\infty(ak+b)\frac{\binom{2k}k^3}{m^k}&=\frac{c}{\pi},\label{1}\tag{1} \\\sum_{k=0}^\...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
4 votes
0 answers
279 views

What is the exact value of the series $\sum_{k=0}^\infty \binom{2k}k^4/256^k$?

By Stirling's formula $n!\sim\sqrt{2\pi n}(n/e)^n$, we have $$\binom{2k}k\sim\frac{4^k}{\sqrt{k\pi}}$$ and hence $$\frac{\binom{2k}k^4}{256^k}\sim\frac1{k^2\pi^2}.\tag{1}$$ So the series $$\sum_{k=0}^\...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
2 votes
0 answers
219 views

Question on globally convergent formulas for the Riemann zeta function $\zeta(s)$

Consider the following two formulas for $\zeta(s)$ $$\zeta(s)=\underset{K\to\infty}{\text{lim}}\left(\frac{1}{1-2^{1-s}}\sum\limits_{n=0}^K \frac{1}{2^{n+1}}\sum\limits_{k=0}^n \binom{n}{k} \frac{(-1)^...
Steven Clark's user avatar
  • 1,126
2 votes
0 answers
215 views

Two conjectures about generalised A329369

Let $m \geqslant 2$ be a fixed integer. Let $$\operatorname{wt}(n,m)=\operatorname{wt}\left(\left\lfloor\frac{n}{m}\right\rfloor,m\right)+n\bmod m, \operatorname{wt}(0,m)=0$$ Then we have an integer ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
113 views

Modulo $2$ binomial transform of A243499 applied $k$ times

Let $m \geqslant 1$ be a fixed integer. Let $f(n)$ be A007814, exponent of highest power of $2$ dividing $n$, a.k.a. the binary carry sequence, the ruler sequence, or the $2$-adic valuation of $n$. ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
149 views

Modulo $2$ binomial transform of A124758

Let $f(n)$ be A153733, remove all trailing ones in binary representation of $n$. Here \begin{align} f(2n)& = 2n\\ f(2n+1)& = f(n)\\ \end{align} Then we have an integer sequence given by \begin{...
Notamathematician's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
57 views

Inverse modulo $2$ binomial transform of generalised A284005

Let $m \geqslant 1$ be a fixed integer. Let $\operatorname{wt}(n)$ be A000120, $1$'s-counting sequence: number of $1$'s in binary expansion of $n$ (or the binary weight of $n$). Let $f(n)$ be A007814, ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
156 views

Open tours by a biased rook (proof verification)

Related questions: Number of open tours by a biased rook on a specific $f(n)\times 1$ board which end on a $k$-th cell from the right Sum with products turned into subsequences Combinatorial ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
180 views

Modulo $2$ binomial transform of $m^n$

Let $m \in \mathbb{R}$. Let $f(n)$ be A007814, exponent of highest power of $2$ dividing $n$, a.k.a. the binary carry sequence, the ruler sequence, or the $2$-adic valuation of $n$. Let $g(n)$ be ...
Notamathematician's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
151 views

Combinatorial interpretation of inverse modulo $2$ binomial transform of A284005

My question is related to the following: Sum with products turned into subsequences We have an identity $$a(n, -1) = \sum\limits_{j=0}^{2^{\operatorname{wt}(n)}-1}(-1)^{\operatorname{wt}(n)-\...
Notamathematician's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
290 views

Evaluations of three series involving binomial coefficients

Question. How to prove the following three identities? \begin{align}\sum_{k=1}^\infty\frac1{k(-2)^k\binom{2k}k}\left(\frac1{k+1}+\ldots+\frac1{2k}\right)=\frac{\log^22}3-\frac{\pi^2}{36},\tag{1} \end{...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
1 vote
0 answers
154 views

An explicit solution to the congruence $x^2\equiv 14(\frac 3p)-(\frac p3)-12\pmod {p}$?

Let $p>3$ be a prime, and let $(\frac{\cdot}p)$ be the Legendre symbol. Then $$14\left(\frac 3p\right)-\left(\frac p3\right)-12=\begin{cases}1&\text{if}\ p\equiv1\pmod{12}, \\-25&\text{if}\ ...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
2 votes
1 answer
194 views

Does this series, related to the Hasse/Ser series for $\zeta(s)$, converge for all $s \in \mathbb{C}$?

I have asked this question at math stack exchange, however it did not get any traction. Still curious about the answer though. Numerical evidence suggests that: $$\lim_{N \to +\infty} \sum_{n=1}^N\...
Agno's user avatar
  • 4,169
7 votes
1 answer
439 views

Two conjectural series for $\pi$ involving the central trinomial coefficients

For each $n=0,1,2,\ldots$, the central trinomial coefficient $T_n$ is defined as the coefficient of $x^n$ in the expansion of $(x^2+x+1)^n$. It is easy to see that $T_n=\sum_{k=0}^{\lfloor n/2\rfloor}\...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
37 votes
3 answers
2k views

How to prove the identity $L(2,(\frac{\cdot}3))=\frac2{15}\sum\limits_{k=1}^\infty\frac{48^k}{k(2k-1)\binom{4k}{2k}\binom{2k}k}$?

For the Dirichlet character $\chi(a)=(\frac a3)$ (which is the Legendre symbol), we have $$L(2,\chi)=\sum_{n=1}^\infty\frac{(\frac n3)}{n^2}=0.781302412896486296867187429624\ldots.$$ Note that this ...
Zhi-Wei Sun's user avatar
  • 15.6k
18 votes
5 answers
3k views

Bernoulli sum meets golden number

Let $B_n$ denote the Bernoulli numbers and let $\phi=\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}2$ be the golden ratio. I encountered the following infinite sum and would like to ask: Question. Is this true? If so, any ...
T. Amdeberhan's user avatar