Fibonomial coefficient

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In mathematics, the Fibonomial coefficients or Fibonacci-binomial coefficients are defined as

where n and k are non-negative integers, 0 ≤ k ≤ n, Fj is the j-th Fibonacci number and n!F is the nth Fibonorial, i.e.

where 0!F, being the empty product, evaluates to 1.

Special values[edit]

The Fibonomial coefficients are all integers. Some special values are:

Fibonomial triangle[edit]

The Fibonomial coefficients (sequence A010048 in the OEIS) are similar to binomial coefficients and can be displayed in a triangle similar to Pascal's triangle. The first eight rows are shown below.

1
1 1
1 1 1
1 2 2 1
1 3 6 3 1
1 5 15 15 5 1
1 8 40 60 40 8 1
1 13 104 260 260 104 13 1

The recurrence relation

implies that the Fibonomial coefficients are always integers.

The fibonomial coefficients can be expressed in terms of the Gaussian binomial coefficients and the golden ratio :

Applications[edit]

Dov Jarden proved that the Fibonomials appear as coefficients of an equation involving powers of consecutive Fibonacci numbers, namely Jarden proved that given any generalized Fibonacci sequence , that is, a sequence that satisfies for every then

for every integer , and every nonnegative integer .

References[edit]

  • Benjamin, Arthur T.; Plott, Sean S., A combinatorial approach to Fibonomial coefficients (PDF), Dept. of Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, CA 91711, archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-02-15, retrieved 2009-04-04{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Ewa Krot, An introduction to finite fibonomial calculus, Institute of Computer Science, Bia lystok University, Poland.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Fibonomial Coefficient". MathWorld.
  • Dov Jarden, Recurring Sequences (second edition 1966), pages 30–33.