Monday, 16 March 2015

algebra precalculus - An incorrect method to sum the first n squares which nevertheless works



Start with the identity



ni=1i3=(ni=1i)2=(n(n+1)2)2.




Differentiate the left-most term with respect to i to get



ddini=1i3=3ni=1i2.



Differentiate the right-most term with respect to n to get



ddn(n(n+1)2)2=12n(n+1)(2n+1).



Equate the derivatives, obtaining




ni=1i2=16n(n+1)(2n+1),



which is known to be correct.



Is there any neat reason why this method happens to get lucky and work for this case?


Answer



Let fk(n)=ni=1ik. We all know that fk is actually
a polynomial of degree k+1. Also fk can be characterised by the two
conditions:

fk(x)fk(x1)=xk
and
fk(0)=0.
Differentiating the first condition gives
fk(x)fk(x1)=kxk1.
Therefore the polynomial (1/k)fk satisfies the first of the two
conditions that fk1 does. But it may not satisfy the second. But then
(1/k)(fk(x)fk(0)) does. So
fk1(x)=fk(x)fk(0)k.




The mysterious numbers fk(0) are related to the Bernoulli numbers,
and when k3 is odd they obligingly vanish...


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