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Encyclopedia > Rising factorial

In mathematics, the Pochhammer symbol

is used in the theory of special functions to represent the "rising factorial" or "upper factorial"

and, confusingly, is used in combinatorics to represent the "falling factorial" or "lower factorial"

The empty product (x)0 is defined to be 1 in both cases.


The falling factorial occurs in a formula which represents polynomials using the forward difference operator Δ and which is formally similar to Taylor's theorem of calculus. In this formula and in many other places, the falling factorial (x)k in the calculus of finite differences plays the role of xk in differential calculus. Note for instance the similarity of

Δ(x)k = k(x)k - 1

and

Dxk = kxk - 1

(where D denotes differentiation with respect to x).


The notation was introduced by Leo August Pochhammer.


An alternative notation used by Ronald L. Graham, Donald E. Knuth and Oren Patashnik in their book Concrete Mathematics uses

for the rising factorial and

for the falling factorial.


  Results from FactBites:
 
PlanetMath: falling factorial (322 words)
Unfortunately, the notational conventions for the rising and falling factorials lack a common standard, and are plagued with a fundamental inconsistency.
to denote the rising factorial and use this symbol in the description of the various flavours of hypergeometric series.
This is version 8 of falling factorial, born on 2002-02-19, modified 2004-07-06.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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