Difference between revisions of "1/B(n,m)=m((n+m-1) choose (n-1))"
From specialfunctionswiki
(Created page with "==Theorem== The following formula holds: $$\dfrac{1}{B(n,m)} = m {{n+m-1} \choose {n-1}},$$ where $B$ denotes the beta function and ${{n+m-1} \choose {n-1}}$ denotes a b...") |
|||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
− | * {{BookReference|Higher Transcendental Functions Volume I|1953| | + | * {{BookReference|Higher Transcendental Functions Volume I|1953|Arthur Erdélyi|author2=Wilhelm Magnus|author3=Fritz Oberhettinger|author4=Francesco G. Tricomi|prev=B(x,y)B(x+y,z)B(x+y+z,u)=Gamma(x)Gamma(y)Gamma(z)Gamma(u)/Gamma(x+y+z+u)|next=1/B(n,m)=n((n+m-1) choose (m-1))}}: $\S 1.5 (9)$ |
[[Category:Theorem]] | [[Category:Theorem]] | ||
[[Category:Unproven]] | [[Category:Unproven]] |
Latest revision as of 21:01, 3 March 2018
Theorem
The following formula holds: $$\dfrac{1}{B(n,m)} = m {{n+m-1} \choose {n-1}},$$ where $B$ denotes the beta function and ${{n+m-1} \choose {n-1}}$ denotes a binomial coefficient.
Proof
References
- 1953: Arthur Erdélyi, Wilhelm Magnus, Fritz Oberhettinger and Francesco G. Tricomi: Higher Transcendental Functions Volume I ... (previous) ... (next): $\S 1.5 (9)$