All Questions
Tagged with combinatorial-identities q-analogs
5 questions
12
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0
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$q$-analogue of the multinomial theorem?
The $q$-binomial theorem states that
$$
\prod_{k=0}^{n-1}(1+q^kt) = \sum_{k=0}^n q^{\binom k2}{n\brack k}_q t^k.
$$
This identity is a $q$-analogue of the binomial theorem
$$
(1+t)^n = \sum_{k=0}^n \...
3
votes
1
answer
186
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Is there a $q$-analogue to Shapiro's convolution identity?
Let $C_n=\frac1{n+1}\binom{2n}n$ denote the Catalan numbers.
This question is motivated by the (unanswered) MO post by Alexander Burstein and my own (answered by Fedor Petrov) MO post.
Specifically, ...
7
votes
1
answer
325
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Looking for a $q$-analogue of a binomial identity
The following identity is well-known and there are a few proofs to it (see Bijective proof problems, by R P Stanley, for this and similar formulae):
$$\sum_{k=0}^n\binom{2k}k\binom{2n-2k}{n-k}=4^n \...
9
votes
0
answers
192
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For $q$-analogues of a known curious identity
In 2002 I published the folllowing curious combinatorial identity:
$$(x+m+1)\sum_{i=0}^m(-1)^i\binom{x+y+i}{m-i}\binom{y+2i}i-\sum_{i=0}^m\binom{x+i}{m-i}(-4)^i=(x-m)\binom xm.$$
My original proof is ...
12
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3
answers
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A "quantum" identity: in search of a proof -Part II
As usual, denote $[n]_q=1+q+\cdots+q^{n-1}=\frac{\,\,1-q^n}{1-q}$ and $[n]_q!=[1]_q[2]_q\cdots[n]_q$. Furthermore, we write
$$\binom{n}k_q=\frac{[n]_q!}{[k]_q!\cdot[n-k]_q!}.$$
As a follow up on this ...