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  Introduction to the factorials and binomials
  General The factorials and binomials have a very long history connected with their natural appearance in combinatorial problems. Such combinatorial‐type problems were known and partially solved even in ancient times. The first mathematical descriptions of binomial coefficients arising from expansions of  for  appeared in the works of Chia Hsien (1050), al-Karaji (about 1100), Omar al-Khayyami (1080), Bhaskara Acharya (1150), al‐Samaw'al (1175), Yang Hui (1261), Tshu shi Kih (1303), Shih–Chieh Chu (1303), M. Stifel (1544), Cardano (1545), Scheubel (1545), Peletier (1549), Tartaglia (1556), Cardan (1570), Stevin (1585), Faulhaber (1615), Girard (1629), Oughtred (1631), Briggs (1633), Mersenne (1636), Fermat (1636), Wallis (1656), Montmort (1708), and De Moivre (1730).  B. Pascal (1653) gave a recursion relation for the binomial, and I. Newton (1676) studied its cases with fractional arguments. It was known that the factorial  grows very fast. Its growth speed was estimated by J. Stirling (1730) who found the famous asymptotic formula for the factorial named after him. A special role in the history of the factorial and binomial belongs to L. Euler, who introduced the gamma function  as the natural extension of factorial (  ) for noninteger arguments and used notations with parentheses for the binomials (1774, 1781). C. F. Hindenburg (1779) used not only binomials but introduced multinomials as their generalizations. The modern notation  was suggested by C. Kramp (1808, 1816). C. F. Gauss (1812) also widely used binomials in his mathematical research, but the modern binomial symbol  was introduced by A. von Ettinghausen (1826); later Förstemann (1835) gave the combinatorial interpretation of the binomial coefficients. A. L. Crelle (1831) used a symbol that notates the generalized factorial  . Later P. E. Appell (1880) ascribed the name Pochhammer symbol for the notation of this product because it was widely used in the research of L. A. Pochhammer (1890). While the double factorial  was introduced long ago, its extension for complex arguments was suggested only several years ago by J. Keiper and O. I. Marichev (1994) during the implementation of the function Factorial2 in Mathematica. The classical combinatorial applications of the factorial and binomial functions are the following:57181644131429Item613418010943441Item723121614745161Item 
   
   Definitions of factorials and binomials
   The factorial  , double factorial  , Pochhammer symbol  , binomial coefficient  , and multinomial coefficient  are defined by the following formulas. The first formula is a general definition for the complex arguments, and the second one is for positive integer arguments: Remark about values at special points: For  and  integers with  and  , the Pochhammer symbol  cannot be uniquely defined by a limiting procedure based on the previous definition because the two variables  and  can approach the integers  and  with  and  at different speeds. For such integers with  , the following definition is used: Similarly, for  negative integers with  , the binomial coefficient  cannot be uniquely defined by a limiting procedure based on the previous definition because the two variables  ,  can approach negative integers  ,  with  at different speeds. For negative integers with  , the following definition is used: The previous symbols are interconnected and belong to one group that can be called factorials and binomials. These symbols are widely used in the coefficients of series expansions for the majority of mathematical functions. A quick look at the factorials and binomials Here is a quick look at the graphics for the factorial the real axis. And here is a quick view of the bivariate binomial and Pochhammer functions. For positive arguments, both functions are free of singularities. For negative arguments, the functions have a complicated structure with many singularities. 
   
   Connections within the group of factorials and binomials and with other function groups
   
   Representations through more general functions
   Two factorials  and  are the particular cases of the incomplete gamma function  with the second argument being  : 
   Representations through related equivalent functions
   The factorial  , double factorial  , Pochhammer symbol  , binomial coefficient  , and multinomial coefficient  can be represented through the gamma function by the following formulas: Many of these formulas are used as the main elements of the definitions of many functions. 
   Representations through other factorials and binomials
   The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  are interconnected by the following formulas: 
   
   The best-known properties and formulas for factorials and binomials
   
   Real values for real arguments
   For real values of arguments, the values of the factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  are real (or infinity). 
   Simple values at zero
   The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  have simple values for zero arguments: 
   Values at fixed points
   Students usually learn the following basic table of values of the factorials  and  in special integer points: 
   Specific values for specialized variables
   If variable  is a rational or integer number, the factorials  and  can be represented by the following general formulas: For some particular values of the variables, the Pochhammer symbol  has the following meanings: Some well‐known formulas for binomial and multinomial functions are: 
   Analyticity
   The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  are defined for all complex values of their variables. The factorials, binomials, and multinomials are analytical functions of their variables and do not have branch cuts and branch points. The functions  and  do not have zeros:  ;  . Therefore, the functions  and  are entire functions with an essential singular point at  . 
   Poles and essential singularities
   The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  have an essential singularity for infinite values of any argument. This singular point is also the point of convergence of the poles (except  for  ). The function  has an infinite set of singular points:  are the simple poles with residues  . The function  has an infinite set of singular points:  are the simple poles with residues  . For fixed  , the function  has an infinite set of singular points:  are the simple poles with residues  . For fixed  , the function  has an infinite set of singular points:  are the simple poles with residues  . For fixed  , the function  has an infinite set of singular points:  are the simple poles with residues  . By variable  (with the other variables fixed) the function  has an infinite set of singular points:  are the simple poles with residues  . 
   Periodicity
   The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  do not have periodicity. 
   Parity and symmetry
   The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  have mirror symmetry: The multinomial  has permutation symmetry: 
   Series representations
   The factorials  ,  , and  have the following series expansions in the regular points:  The series expansions of  and  near singular points are given by the following formulas: 
   Asymptotic series expansions
   The asymptotic behavior of the factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  ,  can be described by the following formulas (only the main terms of asymptotic expansion are given). The first is the famous Stirling's formula: 
   Integral representations
   The factorial  and binomial  can also be represented through the following integrals: 
   Transformations
   The following formulas describe some of the main types of transformations between and among factorials and binomials: Some of these transformations can be called addition formulas, for example: Multiple argument transformations are, for example: The following transformations are for products of the functions: 
   Identities
   The factorials  and  can be defined as the solutions of the following corresponding functional equations: The factorial  is the unique nonzero solution of the functional equation  that is logarithmically convex for all real  ; that is, for which  is a convex function for  . The factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  satisfy the following recurrence identities: The previous formulas can be generalized to the following recurrence identities with a jump of length n: The Pochhammer symbol  and binomial  satisfy the following functional identities: 
   Representations of derivatives
   The derivatives of the functions  ,  ,  ,  ,  have rather simple representations that include the corresponding functions as factors: The symbolic derivatives of the  order form factorials and binomials  ,  ,  ,  , and  have much more complicated representations, which can include recursive function calls, regularized generalized hypergeometric functions  , or Stirling numbers  : 
   
   Applications of factorials and binomials
   Applications of factorials and binomials include combinatorics, number theory, discrete mathematics, and calculus. |