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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CLI-COM |
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COMBINATORIAL ANALYSIS . The Combinatorial Analysis, as it was understood up to the end of the 18th century, was of limited scope and restricted application. P. Nicholson, Historkai in his Essays on the Combinatorial Analysis, published intro- auction. in 1818, states that " the Combinatorial Analysis is a branch of mathematics which teaches us to ascertain and exhibit all the possible ways in which a given number of things may be associated and mixed together; so that we may be certain that we have not missed any collection or arrangement of these things that has not been enumerated." Writers on the subject seemed to recognize fully that it was in need of cultiva- tion, that it was of much service in facilitating algebraical operations of all kinds, and that it was the fundamental method of investigation in the theory of Probabilities. Some idea of its scope may be gathered from a statement of the parts of algebra to which it was commonly applied, viz., the expansion of a . multinomial, the product of two or more multinomials, the quotient of one multinomial by another, the reversion and conversion of series , the theory of indeterminate equations, &c.Some of the elementary theorems and various particular problems appear in the works of the earliest algebraists, but the true pioneer
Demoivre, who first published in Phil. Trans. (1697) the law of the general coefficient in the expansion of the series a+bx+cx2+dx3+ . . . raised to any power. (See also Miscel- lanea Analytica, bk. iv. chap. ii. prob. iv.) His work on Proba- bilities would naturally lead him to consider questions of this nature. An important work at the time it was pub- lished was the De Partition Numerorum of Leonhard Euler, in which the consideration of the reciprocal of the product (I xz) (1 x2z) (1x3z) . . . establishes a fundamental connexion between arithmetic and algebra, arithmetical addition being made to depend upon algebraical multiplication, and a close bond is secured between the theories of discontinuous and continuous quantities. (Cf. NUMBERS, PARTITION OF.) The multiplication of the two powers x, xb, viz. x-i-xb=e+a, showed Euler that he could convert arithmetical addition into algebraical multiplication, and in the paper referred to he gives the complete formal solution of the main problems of the partition of numbers. He did not obtain general expressions for the coefficients which arose in the expansion of his generating functions, but he gave the actual values to a high order of the coefficients which arise from the generating functions corresponding to various conditions of partitionment. Other writers who have contributed to the solution of special
Simpson
paper remained alike the chief
In 1846 Karl G. J. Jacobi studied the partitions of numbers by means of certain identities involving infinite series that are met with in the theory of elliptic functions. The method employed is essentially that of Euler. Interest
Augustus
Fabian
The most important problem of combinatorial analysis is con- nected with the distribution of objects into classes. A number n may be regarded as enumerating n similar objects; it Panda- is then said to be unipartite. On the other hand, if the mental objects be not all similar they cannot be effectively enu- probiem. merated by a single integer; we require a succession of integers. If the objects be p in number of one kind, q of a second kind, r of a third, &c., the enumeration is given by the succession pqr . . . which is termed a multipartite number, and written, pqr..., where p+q+r+ . . . =n. If the order of magnitude of the numbers p, q, r, . . . is immaterial, it is usual to write them in descending order of magnitude, and the succession may then be termed a partition of the number n, and is written (pqr ...). The succession of integers thus has a twofold signification: (i.) as a multipartite number it may enumerate objects of different kinds; (ii.) it may be viewed as a partitionment into separate parts of a unipartite number. We may say either that the objects are represented by the multipartite number pqr ..., or that they are defined by the partition (pqr . . . ) of the unipartite number n. Similarly the classes into which they are distributed may be m in number all similar; or they may be pi of one kind, qi of a second, r1 of . a third, &c., where pi + qi +ri + ... = m. We may thus denote the classes either by the multipartite numbers plgirl . . ., or by the partition (pigiri . . . ) of the unipartite number m. The distributions to be considered are such that any number of objects may be in any one class subject to the restriction that no class is empty. Two cases arise. If the order of the objects in a particular class is immaterial, the class is termed a parcel; if the order is material, the class is termed a group. The distribution into parcels is alone considered here, and the main problem is the enumeration of the distributions of objects defined by the partition (pqr ... ) of the number n into parcels defined by the partition (pigiri ... ) of the number m. (See "Symmetric Functions and the Theory of Distributions," Proc. London Mathematical Society, vol. xix.) Three particular cases are of great importance. Case I. is the " one-to-one distribution," in which the number of parcels is equal to the number of objects, and one object is distributed in each parcel. Case II. is that in which the parcels are all different, being defined by the partition (till . . . ), conveniently written (1'") ; this is the theory of the compositions of unipartite arid multipartite numbers. Case III. is that in which the parcels are all similar, being defined by the partition (m); this is the theory of the partitions of unipartite and multipartite numbers. Previous to discussing these in detail, it is necessary to describe the method of symmetric functions which will be largely utilized. Let a, /3, y, ... be the roots cf the equation x'aixn_i+a2xn E...=o. The symmetric function Ea5/3yr..., where p+q+r+ ... =n is, in the partition notation, written (pqr . . . ). Let A(PQr (p e rl ) denote the number of ways of distri- buting the n objects defined by the partition (pqr . ) into the m parcels defined by the partition (pigiri . . . ). The expression End of Article: COMBINATORIAL ANALYSIS If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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