Applying Burnside's lemma to show there are $k+n-1 choose k-1$ ways to store n stars in k bins?











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Usually it is proven using multisets I think, but I wondered how Burnside's lemma could be applied. Everytime I tried to wrap it around my head the indices didn't seem to fit. So I TeXed it and eventually I found out.










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  • 1




    Stars and Bars is the usual way that I see this shown.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 16:59










  • The wikipedia-proof is taking advantage of Multisets if it were to be formalised, isn't it?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:56










  • It is counting the number of ways to arrange $n$ stars and $k-1$ bars among each other.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 20:08















up vote
1
down vote

favorite
3












Usually it is proven using multisets I think, but I wondered how Burnside's lemma could be applied. Everytime I tried to wrap it around my head the indices didn't seem to fit. So I TeXed it and eventually I found out.










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 1




    Stars and Bars is the usual way that I see this shown.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 16:59










  • The wikipedia-proof is taking advantage of Multisets if it were to be formalised, isn't it?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:56










  • It is counting the number of ways to arrange $n$ stars and $k-1$ bars among each other.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 20:08













up vote
1
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
1
down vote

favorite
3






3





Usually it is proven using multisets I think, but I wondered how Burnside's lemma could be applied. Everytime I tried to wrap it around my head the indices didn't seem to fit. So I TeXed it and eventually I found out.










share|cite|improve this question















Usually it is proven using multisets I think, but I wondered how Burnside's lemma could be applied. Everytime I tried to wrap it around my head the indices didn't seem to fit. So I TeXed it and eventually I found out.







combinatorics group-actions algebraic-combinatorics






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edited Nov 17 at 18:11

























asked Nov 17 at 16:23









Martin Erhardt

1859




1859








  • 1




    Stars and Bars is the usual way that I see this shown.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 16:59










  • The wikipedia-proof is taking advantage of Multisets if it were to be formalised, isn't it?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:56










  • It is counting the number of ways to arrange $n$ stars and $k-1$ bars among each other.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 20:08














  • 1




    Stars and Bars is the usual way that I see this shown.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 16:59










  • The wikipedia-proof is taking advantage of Multisets if it were to be formalised, isn't it?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:56










  • It is counting the number of ways to arrange $n$ stars and $k-1$ bars among each other.
    – robjohn
    Nov 17 at 20:08








1




1




Stars and Bars is the usual way that I see this shown.
– robjohn
Nov 17 at 16:59




Stars and Bars is the usual way that I see this shown.
– robjohn
Nov 17 at 16:59












The wikipedia-proof is taking advantage of Multisets if it were to be formalised, isn't it?
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 19:56




The wikipedia-proof is taking advantage of Multisets if it were to be formalised, isn't it?
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 19:56












It is counting the number of ways to arrange $n$ stars and $k-1$ bars among each other.
– robjohn
Nov 17 at 20:08




It is counting the number of ways to arrange $n$ stars and $k-1$ bars among each other.
– robjohn
Nov 17 at 20:08










2 Answers
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1
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The $k$ bins can all be distinguished, so we're dealing with the trivial group whose one element is the identity permutation over $k$ elements.



Thus the cycle index is $Z = t_1^k$. There's one way of putting one star in a bin, one way of putting two stars, etc. so the final generating function is $f(z) = left(frac{1}{1-z}right)^k = (1-z)^{-k}$. Then the term with $z^n$ is $frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-z)^n$ with coefficient $$frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-1)^n = frac{(k+n-1)^{underline n}}{n!} = binom{k+n-1}{n}$$





Note that this is also $binom{k+n-1}{k-1}$, so maybe the reason the indexes always came out wrong for you is that you were trying to prove a statement with an out-by-one error.






share|cite|improve this answer





















  • Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:30








  • 1




    Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 18:55










  • I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:11








  • 1




    qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 18 at 8:48


















up vote
1
down vote













EDIT: Substitute n=k, k=n. This proof follows the urn model -intuition.



Let $|N|=n$, $M=N^{k}/sim$ and:
$$x,yin N^k, x sim yLeftrightarrowexists sigma in S^k: (x_1,...,x_k)=(y_{sigma(1)},...,y_{sigma(k)})$$
Obviously M is the orbital space of a group action: $sigma.(x_1,...,x_k)=(x_{sigma(1)},...,x_{sigma(k)})$.



To proof: $|N^k/sim|={k+n -1choose k}$



Induction by k:



Trivially: $$|N^1/sim|overset{Burnside}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^1}|N|^1}{1!}=|N|=n={1+n-1choose 1}$$



$k-1 rightarrow k:$



Each $sigma$ in $S^{k-1}$ can be naturally identified by $sigma'in S^k$ $$sigma'(h)=left{begin{array}{cl} sigma(h), & hleq k-1\ k, & h=k end{array}right.$$
$$ forall h in {1,...,k}:omega_h:S^{k-1}rightarrow { sigma'' in S^k:sigma''(h)=k},sigmamapsto (sigma'(h), k) circ sigma' $$
$(sigma(h) k)$ is the transposition, that swaps $sigma(h)$ with k. $omega_h$
is bijective(trivially injective, surjective with inverse $sigma mapsto ((sigma(h),sigma(k))sigma)|_{{1,...,k-1}}$, which is well defined, because $sigma(h)=k$ and $sigma(k) in {1,..k-1}$ for $hneq k$)



Let $F_k$ be: $S^k rightarrow N^k, F_k(sigma)={x in N^k: sigma(x)=x}$



$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|+sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$



Moreover:
$$F_k(omega_k(sigma))=F_{k-1}(sigma)times N Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_k(sigma))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|n$$



Bijectivity of transposition leads to: $x in F_k(omega_h(sigma)) Rightarrow (x_1,...,x_{k-1})in F_{k-1}(sigma)$.
For each $hin {1,...,k-1}$ and $xin F_{k-1}(sigma)$ the k-th compononent is uniquely determined, by $x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}$.Since $omega_h(sigma(k))=sigma(h)$ and $x_{(omega_h circ sigma)^{-1}(k)}=x_h=x_{sigma(h)}=x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}=x_k$, $(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))})$ is actually in $F_k(omega_h(sigma))$. It follows, that:
$$F_k(omega_h(sigma))={(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}) : x in F_{k-1}(sigma)} Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_h(sigma(k)))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|$$



This yields: $$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_k(sigma))|n}{k!}$$
$$overset{IH}{=}frac{n(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{n-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$
Now we are taking a closer look at the latter guys $forall h in{1,..k-1}:$
$$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)= i, i=1}^{k-1}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_i(sigma))|}{k!}$$



$$overset{IH}{=}frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$
We conclude:
$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}+frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$
$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+
frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$

$$={k+n-2 choose k}+{k+n-2 choose k-1 }={k+n-1 choose k}$$






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  • 1




    The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 17:45










  • Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:09










  • So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:13











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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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up vote
1
down vote













The $k$ bins can all be distinguished, so we're dealing with the trivial group whose one element is the identity permutation over $k$ elements.



Thus the cycle index is $Z = t_1^k$. There's one way of putting one star in a bin, one way of putting two stars, etc. so the final generating function is $f(z) = left(frac{1}{1-z}right)^k = (1-z)^{-k}$. Then the term with $z^n$ is $frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-z)^n$ with coefficient $$frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-1)^n = frac{(k+n-1)^{underline n}}{n!} = binom{k+n-1}{n}$$





Note that this is also $binom{k+n-1}{k-1}$, so maybe the reason the indexes always came out wrong for you is that you were trying to prove a statement with an out-by-one error.






share|cite|improve this answer





















  • Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:30








  • 1




    Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 18:55










  • I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:11








  • 1




    qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 18 at 8:48















up vote
1
down vote













The $k$ bins can all be distinguished, so we're dealing with the trivial group whose one element is the identity permutation over $k$ elements.



Thus the cycle index is $Z = t_1^k$. There's one way of putting one star in a bin, one way of putting two stars, etc. so the final generating function is $f(z) = left(frac{1}{1-z}right)^k = (1-z)^{-k}$. Then the term with $z^n$ is $frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-z)^n$ with coefficient $$frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-1)^n = frac{(k+n-1)^{underline n}}{n!} = binom{k+n-1}{n}$$





Note that this is also $binom{k+n-1}{k-1}$, so maybe the reason the indexes always came out wrong for you is that you were trying to prove a statement with an out-by-one error.






share|cite|improve this answer





















  • Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:30








  • 1




    Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 18:55










  • I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:11








  • 1




    qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 18 at 8:48













up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









The $k$ bins can all be distinguished, so we're dealing with the trivial group whose one element is the identity permutation over $k$ elements.



Thus the cycle index is $Z = t_1^k$. There's one way of putting one star in a bin, one way of putting two stars, etc. so the final generating function is $f(z) = left(frac{1}{1-z}right)^k = (1-z)^{-k}$. Then the term with $z^n$ is $frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-z)^n$ with coefficient $$frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-1)^n = frac{(k+n-1)^{underline n}}{n!} = binom{k+n-1}{n}$$





Note that this is also $binom{k+n-1}{k-1}$, so maybe the reason the indexes always came out wrong for you is that you were trying to prove a statement with an out-by-one error.






share|cite|improve this answer












The $k$ bins can all be distinguished, so we're dealing with the trivial group whose one element is the identity permutation over $k$ elements.



Thus the cycle index is $Z = t_1^k$. There's one way of putting one star in a bin, one way of putting two stars, etc. so the final generating function is $f(z) = left(frac{1}{1-z}right)^k = (1-z)^{-k}$. Then the term with $z^n$ is $frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-z)^n$ with coefficient $$frac{(-k)^{underline n}}{n!}(-1)^n = frac{(k+n-1)^{underline n}}{n!} = binom{k+n-1}{n}$$





Note that this is also $binom{k+n-1}{k-1}$, so maybe the reason the indexes always came out wrong for you is that you were trying to prove a statement with an out-by-one error.







share|cite|improve this answer












share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer










answered Nov 17 at 17:43









Peter Taylor

8,35212240




8,35212240












  • Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:30








  • 1




    Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 18:55










  • I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:11








  • 1




    qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 18 at 8:48


















  • Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:30








  • 1




    Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 18:55










  • I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 19:11








  • 1




    qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 18 at 8:48
















Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 18:30






Could you please elaborate on the set you are operating on and how? Operating with a cyclic group is obviously way more elegant, than with the Symmetric group -even though you do not seem to use burnside's lemma.
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 18:30






1




1




Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
– Peter Taylor
Nov 17 at 18:55




Strictly I'm using Pólya's enumeration theorem, which is a generalisation of not-Burnside's lemma. $G$ contains only the identity element of $S_k$, so the sum is trivial.
– Peter Taylor
Nov 17 at 18:55












I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 19:11






I'am reliefed to see, that I could not have come up with that with my limited knowledge :). I wonder: Would it be possible to stay that short, without this strong theorem?
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 19:11






1




1




qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
– Peter Taylor
Nov 18 at 8:48




qchu.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/… might achieve that, although I personally could use an extra step or two of explanation. (The next two posts in the series may also interest you).
– Peter Taylor
Nov 18 at 8:48










up vote
1
down vote













EDIT: Substitute n=k, k=n. This proof follows the urn model -intuition.



Let $|N|=n$, $M=N^{k}/sim$ and:
$$x,yin N^k, x sim yLeftrightarrowexists sigma in S^k: (x_1,...,x_k)=(y_{sigma(1)},...,y_{sigma(k)})$$
Obviously M is the orbital space of a group action: $sigma.(x_1,...,x_k)=(x_{sigma(1)},...,x_{sigma(k)})$.



To proof: $|N^k/sim|={k+n -1choose k}$



Induction by k:



Trivially: $$|N^1/sim|overset{Burnside}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^1}|N|^1}{1!}=|N|=n={1+n-1choose 1}$$



$k-1 rightarrow k:$



Each $sigma$ in $S^{k-1}$ can be naturally identified by $sigma'in S^k$ $$sigma'(h)=left{begin{array}{cl} sigma(h), & hleq k-1\ k, & h=k end{array}right.$$
$$ forall h in {1,...,k}:omega_h:S^{k-1}rightarrow { sigma'' in S^k:sigma''(h)=k},sigmamapsto (sigma'(h), k) circ sigma' $$
$(sigma(h) k)$ is the transposition, that swaps $sigma(h)$ with k. $omega_h$
is bijective(trivially injective, surjective with inverse $sigma mapsto ((sigma(h),sigma(k))sigma)|_{{1,...,k-1}}$, which is well defined, because $sigma(h)=k$ and $sigma(k) in {1,..k-1}$ for $hneq k$)



Let $F_k$ be: $S^k rightarrow N^k, F_k(sigma)={x in N^k: sigma(x)=x}$



$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|+sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$



Moreover:
$$F_k(omega_k(sigma))=F_{k-1}(sigma)times N Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_k(sigma))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|n$$



Bijectivity of transposition leads to: $x in F_k(omega_h(sigma)) Rightarrow (x_1,...,x_{k-1})in F_{k-1}(sigma)$.
For each $hin {1,...,k-1}$ and $xin F_{k-1}(sigma)$ the k-th compononent is uniquely determined, by $x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}$.Since $omega_h(sigma(k))=sigma(h)$ and $x_{(omega_h circ sigma)^{-1}(k)}=x_h=x_{sigma(h)}=x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}=x_k$, $(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))})$ is actually in $F_k(omega_h(sigma))$. It follows, that:
$$F_k(omega_h(sigma))={(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}) : x in F_{k-1}(sigma)} Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_h(sigma(k)))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|$$



This yields: $$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_k(sigma))|n}{k!}$$
$$overset{IH}{=}frac{n(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{n-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$
Now we are taking a closer look at the latter guys $forall h in{1,..k-1}:$
$$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)= i, i=1}^{k-1}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_i(sigma))|}{k!}$$



$$overset{IH}{=}frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$
We conclude:
$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}+frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$
$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+
frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$

$$={k+n-2 choose k}+{k+n-2 choose k-1 }={k+n-1 choose k}$$






share|cite|improve this answer



















  • 1




    The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 17:45










  • Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:09










  • So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:13















up vote
1
down vote













EDIT: Substitute n=k, k=n. This proof follows the urn model -intuition.



Let $|N|=n$, $M=N^{k}/sim$ and:
$$x,yin N^k, x sim yLeftrightarrowexists sigma in S^k: (x_1,...,x_k)=(y_{sigma(1)},...,y_{sigma(k)})$$
Obviously M is the orbital space of a group action: $sigma.(x_1,...,x_k)=(x_{sigma(1)},...,x_{sigma(k)})$.



To proof: $|N^k/sim|={k+n -1choose k}$



Induction by k:



Trivially: $$|N^1/sim|overset{Burnside}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^1}|N|^1}{1!}=|N|=n={1+n-1choose 1}$$



$k-1 rightarrow k:$



Each $sigma$ in $S^{k-1}$ can be naturally identified by $sigma'in S^k$ $$sigma'(h)=left{begin{array}{cl} sigma(h), & hleq k-1\ k, & h=k end{array}right.$$
$$ forall h in {1,...,k}:omega_h:S^{k-1}rightarrow { sigma'' in S^k:sigma''(h)=k},sigmamapsto (sigma'(h), k) circ sigma' $$
$(sigma(h) k)$ is the transposition, that swaps $sigma(h)$ with k. $omega_h$
is bijective(trivially injective, surjective with inverse $sigma mapsto ((sigma(h),sigma(k))sigma)|_{{1,...,k-1}}$, which is well defined, because $sigma(h)=k$ and $sigma(k) in {1,..k-1}$ for $hneq k$)



Let $F_k$ be: $S^k rightarrow N^k, F_k(sigma)={x in N^k: sigma(x)=x}$



$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|+sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$



Moreover:
$$F_k(omega_k(sigma))=F_{k-1}(sigma)times N Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_k(sigma))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|n$$



Bijectivity of transposition leads to: $x in F_k(omega_h(sigma)) Rightarrow (x_1,...,x_{k-1})in F_{k-1}(sigma)$.
For each $hin {1,...,k-1}$ and $xin F_{k-1}(sigma)$ the k-th compononent is uniquely determined, by $x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}$.Since $omega_h(sigma(k))=sigma(h)$ and $x_{(omega_h circ sigma)^{-1}(k)}=x_h=x_{sigma(h)}=x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}=x_k$, $(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))})$ is actually in $F_k(omega_h(sigma))$. It follows, that:
$$F_k(omega_h(sigma))={(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}) : x in F_{k-1}(sigma)} Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_h(sigma(k)))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|$$



This yields: $$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_k(sigma))|n}{k!}$$
$$overset{IH}{=}frac{n(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{n-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$
Now we are taking a closer look at the latter guys $forall h in{1,..k-1}:$
$$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)= i, i=1}^{k-1}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_i(sigma))|}{k!}$$



$$overset{IH}{=}frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$
We conclude:
$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}+frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$
$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+
frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$

$$={k+n-2 choose k}+{k+n-2 choose k-1 }={k+n-1 choose k}$$






share|cite|improve this answer



















  • 1




    The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 17:45










  • Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:09










  • So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:13













up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









EDIT: Substitute n=k, k=n. This proof follows the urn model -intuition.



Let $|N|=n$, $M=N^{k}/sim$ and:
$$x,yin N^k, x sim yLeftrightarrowexists sigma in S^k: (x_1,...,x_k)=(y_{sigma(1)},...,y_{sigma(k)})$$
Obviously M is the orbital space of a group action: $sigma.(x_1,...,x_k)=(x_{sigma(1)},...,x_{sigma(k)})$.



To proof: $|N^k/sim|={k+n -1choose k}$



Induction by k:



Trivially: $$|N^1/sim|overset{Burnside}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^1}|N|^1}{1!}=|N|=n={1+n-1choose 1}$$



$k-1 rightarrow k:$



Each $sigma$ in $S^{k-1}$ can be naturally identified by $sigma'in S^k$ $$sigma'(h)=left{begin{array}{cl} sigma(h), & hleq k-1\ k, & h=k end{array}right.$$
$$ forall h in {1,...,k}:omega_h:S^{k-1}rightarrow { sigma'' in S^k:sigma''(h)=k},sigmamapsto (sigma'(h), k) circ sigma' $$
$(sigma(h) k)$ is the transposition, that swaps $sigma(h)$ with k. $omega_h$
is bijective(trivially injective, surjective with inverse $sigma mapsto ((sigma(h),sigma(k))sigma)|_{{1,...,k-1}}$, which is well defined, because $sigma(h)=k$ and $sigma(k) in {1,..k-1}$ for $hneq k$)



Let $F_k$ be: $S^k rightarrow N^k, F_k(sigma)={x in N^k: sigma(x)=x}$



$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|+sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$



Moreover:
$$F_k(omega_k(sigma))=F_{k-1}(sigma)times N Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_k(sigma))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|n$$



Bijectivity of transposition leads to: $x in F_k(omega_h(sigma)) Rightarrow (x_1,...,x_{k-1})in F_{k-1}(sigma)$.
For each $hin {1,...,k-1}$ and $xin F_{k-1}(sigma)$ the k-th compononent is uniquely determined, by $x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}$.Since $omega_h(sigma(k))=sigma(h)$ and $x_{(omega_h circ sigma)^{-1}(k)}=x_h=x_{sigma(h)}=x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}=x_k$, $(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))})$ is actually in $F_k(omega_h(sigma))$. It follows, that:
$$F_k(omega_h(sigma))={(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}) : x in F_{k-1}(sigma)} Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_h(sigma(k)))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|$$



This yields: $$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_k(sigma))|n}{k!}$$
$$overset{IH}{=}frac{n(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{n-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$
Now we are taking a closer look at the latter guys $forall h in{1,..k-1}:$
$$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)= i, i=1}^{k-1}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_i(sigma))|}{k!}$$



$$overset{IH}{=}frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$
We conclude:
$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}+frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$
$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+
frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$

$$={k+n-2 choose k}+{k+n-2 choose k-1 }={k+n-1 choose k}$$






share|cite|improve this answer














EDIT: Substitute n=k, k=n. This proof follows the urn model -intuition.



Let $|N|=n$, $M=N^{k}/sim$ and:
$$x,yin N^k, x sim yLeftrightarrowexists sigma in S^k: (x_1,...,x_k)=(y_{sigma(1)},...,y_{sigma(k)})$$
Obviously M is the orbital space of a group action: $sigma.(x_1,...,x_k)=(x_{sigma(1)},...,x_{sigma(k)})$.



To proof: $|N^k/sim|={k+n -1choose k}$



Induction by k:



Trivially: $$|N^1/sim|overset{Burnside}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^1}|N|^1}{1!}=|N|=n={1+n-1choose 1}$$



$k-1 rightarrow k:$



Each $sigma$ in $S^{k-1}$ can be naturally identified by $sigma'in S^k$ $$sigma'(h)=left{begin{array}{cl} sigma(h), & hleq k-1\ k, & h=k end{array}right.$$
$$ forall h in {1,...,k}:omega_h:S^{k-1}rightarrow { sigma'' in S^k:sigma''(h)=k},sigmamapsto (sigma'(h), k) circ sigma' $$
$(sigma(h) k)$ is the transposition, that swaps $sigma(h)$ with k. $omega_h$
is bijective(trivially injective, surjective with inverse $sigma mapsto ((sigma(h),sigma(k))sigma)|_{{1,...,k-1}}$, which is well defined, because $sigma(h)=k$ and $sigma(k) in {1,..k-1}$ for $hneq k$)



Let $F_k$ be: $S^k rightarrow N^k, F_k(sigma)={x in N^k: sigma(x)=x}$



$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|+sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$



Moreover:
$$F_k(omega_k(sigma))=F_{k-1}(sigma)times N Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_k(sigma))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|n$$



Bijectivity of transposition leads to: $x in F_k(omega_h(sigma)) Rightarrow (x_1,...,x_{k-1})in F_{k-1}(sigma)$.
For each $hin {1,...,k-1}$ and $xin F_{k-1}(sigma)$ the k-th compononent is uniquely determined, by $x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}$.Since $omega_h(sigma(k))=sigma(h)$ and $x_{(omega_h circ sigma)^{-1}(k)}=x_h=x_{sigma(h)}=x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}=x_k$, $(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))})$ is actually in $F_k(omega_h(sigma))$. It follows, that:
$$F_k(omega_h(sigma))={(x,x_{omega_h(sigma(k))}) : x in F_{k-1}(sigma)} Rightarrow |F_{k}(omega_h(sigma(k)))|=|F_{k-1}(sigma)|$$



This yields: $$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_k(sigma))|n}{k!}$$
$$overset{IH}{=}frac{n(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{n-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}$$
Now we are taking a closer look at the latter guys $forall h in{1,..k-1}:$
$$frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)= i, i=1}^{k-1}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}=frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}sum_{sigmain S^{k-1}}|F_{k-1}(omega_i(sigma))|}{k!}$$



$$overset{IH}{=}frac{sum_{i=1}^{k-1}(k-1)!{k+n-2 choose k-1}}{k!}=frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$
We conclude:
$$|N^k/sim|=frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)=k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}+frac{sum_{sigmain S^{k},sigma(k)neq k}|F_k(sigma)|}{k!}$$
$$={k+n-2 choose k}+frac{1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1}+
frac{k-1}{k}{k+n-2 choose k-1 }$$

$$={k+n-2 choose k}+{k+n-2 choose k-1 }={k+n-1 choose k}$$







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








edited Nov 17 at 18:21

























answered Nov 17 at 16:23









Martin Erhardt

1859




1859








  • 1




    The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 17:45










  • Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:09










  • So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:13














  • 1




    The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
    – Peter Taylor
    Nov 17 at 17:45










  • Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:09










  • So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
    – Martin Erhardt
    Nov 17 at 18:13








1




1




The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
– Peter Taylor
Nov 17 at 17:45




The base case of the induction is wrong. Trivially, if you only have one bin there's only one way to store the stars.
– Peter Taylor
Nov 17 at 17:45












Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 18:09




Oh I thought about pulling n balls out of an urn k - times neglecting sequence with replacement. This is dual in a way to the stars-bins-approach.
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 18:09












So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 18:13




So the proof is actually correct, but I confused two different models of the same problem.
– Martin Erhardt
Nov 17 at 18:13


















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