Sunday, 23 December 2012

combinatorics - Combinatorial Proof of Derangement Identity



Let Dn be the number of derangements of n objects. Find a combinatorial proof of the following identity:



n! = D_n + \dbinom{n}{1} \cdot D_{n-1}+ \dbinom{n}{2} \cdot D_{n-2} + \cdots + \dbinom{n}{n-1} \cdot D_1 + \dbinom{n}{n} \cdot D_{0}



This question has been somewhat asked and answered before here

Finding a combinatorial proof of this identity: n!=\sum_{i=0}^n \binom{n}{n-i}D_i



However, I need to come up with a combinatorial proof. I don't think the answer provided in the linked page is a combinatorial proof. When I learned about combinatorial proofs I was told they need to be more 'real life.' For example, in a committee of n people, a subcommittee and a president must be chosen...



How can I write a true combinatorial proof for this identity?


Answer



All permutations of N objects have between 0 and N objects in their original position. Then count each case, and add them all up:




  • Pick zero objects to keep in their original position. Scramble the remaining N objects.


  • Pick one object to keep in its original position. Scramble the remaining N-1 objects.

  • Pick two objects to keep in their original positions. Scramble the remaining N-2 objects.

  • (N-4 similar statements ...)

  • Pick N-1 objects to keep in their original position. Scramble the remaining 1 object.

  • Pick N objects to keep in their original positions. Scramble the remaining 0 objects.



All of these cases have the same form: "Pick n objects out of N" has _NC_n choices. "Scramble m objects" has D_m choices.


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