Binomial Identities
The Binomial Theorem
Theorem I
For all nonnegative integers ,
Proof
Consider the product of sums, . When computing this product, we take one summand from each parentheses, multiply them together, then repeat this in all of possible ways and add the results. We get a product equal to each time we take summands equal to . There are -element subsets of the set of all parentheses, so we will get such a term times, and the proof is complete.
Theorem II
For all positive integers , the alternating sum of binomial coefficients is zero. In other words,
Proof
Applying the binomial theorem with and we immediately get our claim.
Theorem III
For all nonnegative integers and , the identity
holds.
Proof
The right-hand side is, by definition, the number of -element subsets of . Such a subset either contains the element , or it does not. If it does, then the rest of is a -element subset of , and these are enumerated by the first member of the left-hand side. If it does not, then is a -element subset of , and these are enumerated by the second member of the left-hand side.
Theorem IV
For all nonnegative integers n,
Proof I
Both sides count the number of all subsets of an -element set. The left-hand side counts directly, while the right-hand side counts the number of -element subsets, then sums over .
Proof II
Apply the binomial theorem with .
Theorem V
For all nonnegative integers and ,
Proof
The right-hand side clearly counts all -element subsets of . The left-hand side counts the same, separated into cases according to the largest element. That is, there are subsets of that have elements whose largest element is ; there are subsets of that have elements whose largest element is , and so on. In general, there are subsets of that have elements whose largest element is , for all . Indeed, if the largest element of such a subset is , then its remaining elements must form a subset of .
Theorem VI
For all nonnegative integers , the identity
holds. Before proving the theorem, note that it is not even obvious why
should be an integer. Our proof will show that it is not only an integer, it is equal to . This hopefully convinces the reader that binomial coefficient identities are beautiful.
Proof I
Both sides count the number of ways to choose a committee among people, then to choose a president from the committee. On the left-hand side, we first choose a -member committee in ways, then we choose its president in ways. On the right-hand side, we first choose the president in ways, then we choose a subset of the remaining -member set of people for the role of non-president committee members in ways.
We provide another proof that uses the binomial theorem. It also gives us an early hint that sometimes very finite-looking problems, such as choice problems, can be solved by using methods from infinite calculus, such as functions and their derivatives.
Proof II
Apply the binomial theorem with to get the identity
Both sides are differentiable functions of the variable . So we can take their derivatives with respect to , and they must be equal. This yields
Now substitute .
Theorem VII (Vandermonde's identity)
For all positive integers , , and ,
Proof
The left-hand side counts all -element subsets of . The right-hand side counts the same, according to the number of elements chosen from . Indeed, we can first choose elements from in ways, then choose the remaining elements from the set in ways.
The Multinomial Theorem
Definition
Let , where and are nonnegative integers. We define
The numbers are called multinomial coefficients.
Theorem I (Multinomial theorem)
For all nonnegative integers and , the equality
holds. Here the sum is taken over all -tuples of nonnegative integers such that
Proof
We have to show that the term can be obtained in exactly ways as a product of variables, one from each parentheses of . To obtain such a term, we have to choose from exactly parentheses, for all .
Now let us take copies of , for all , and order these letters linearly. Theorem shows that this can be done in exactly ways. On the other hand, each linear ordering defines a natural way of choosing variables from the parentheses. Indeed, if the th letter of is , then from the th parentheses, we choose . This way our linear orderings will produce exactly terms that are equal to .
It is clear that this procedure establishes a bijection from the set of linear orderings of letters, of which is equal to for all onto that of terms of that are equal to . Therefore, the coefficient of in is precisely , and the proof follows.