N-nomial expansion (1 Viewer)

KFunk

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I rediscovered a 'trick' today that I had found some time ago and I thought I might share it with you guys:


In the expansion of (a<sub>1</sub> + a<sub>2</sub> + ... + a<sub>n</sub>)<sup>P</sup> the coefficient of a<sub>1</sub><sup>p<sub>1</sub></sup>a<sub>2</sub><sup>p<sub>1</sub></sup>...a<sub>n</sub><sup>p<sub>n</sub></sup> is equal to P!/p<sub>1</sub>!p<sub>2</sub>!...p<sub>n</sub>! where (p<sub>1</sub> + p<sub>2</sub> + ... p<sub>n</sub> = P)


The basic logic of this is that if you consider that you have p<sub>1</sub> lots of a<sub>1</sub>, p<sub>2</sub> lots of a<sub>2</sub> ... and so on then there are P!/p<sub>1</sub>!p<sub>2</sub>!...p<sub>n</sub>! ways to arrange these elements in a line - where their position in the line corresponds to the order in which they have been 'chosen' from the bracket.


What I find this helps with is if you want to extend the logic of binomial probability to a situation that can be expressed as an n-nomial, i.e. (a<sub>1</sub> + a<sub>2</sub> + ... + a<sub>n</sub>)<sup>P</sup> where a<sub>1</sub> + a<sub>2</sub> + ... + a<sub>n</sub> = 1. An example is: A fair die is thrown 6 times. Find the probability that the six scores obtained will consist of exactly two 6's and four odd numbers (give it a go).


Anyhow, there are common sense alternatives to using this method but it's helped me out a few times so I figured you people might find some uses of your own. Also I've attached an alternative explanation (the first I came up with) which I made previously to send to people rather than explaining it again. Don't bother opening it unless you're interested in another way of explaining it.
 

acmilan

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I must commend you KFunk, you truely have the right frame of mind and attitude to be a great mathematician in the future! (if that's your thing ;)).
 

Sepulchres

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Dude, that is awesome. I understood the 'basic' explanation better since the variables confuse me. Good stuff.
 

noah

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there is also a really cool pascals triangle like pattern that developes in three dimensional for for a tri-nomial, 4 dimensional for quad-nomial........ and n-dimensional for an n-nomial.

you can then apply the formula you derived and find a number at any point in the n-dimensional pyramid.

this is what i used to spend religion class playing with
 

lum

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whoa kfunk, that's really ingenius, what do you plan to do at UNI?
 

香港!

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Damn soooooooooo many high lvl people applying for Med!
No chance for me:(
 

thunderdax

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香港! said:
Damn soooooooooo many high lvl people applying for Med!
No chance for me:(
Thank god i didn't apply for med. Then i might be feeling some stress right now
 

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