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Triangular number

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The first six triangular numbers (not starting with T0)
Triangular Numbers Plot

A triangular number or triangle number counts objects arranged in an equilateral triangle. Triangular numbers are a type of figurate number, other examples being square numbers and cube numbers. The nth triangular number is the number of dots in the triangular arrangement with n dots on each side, and is equal to the sum of the n natural numbers from 1 to n. The sequence of triangular numbers, starting with the 0th triangular number, is

0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 15, 21, 28, 36, 45, 55, 66, 78, 91, 105, 120, 136, 153, 171, 190, 210, 231, 253, 276, 300, 325, 351, 378, 406, 435, 465, 496, 528, 561, 595, 630, 666...

(sequence A000217 in the OEIS)

Formula

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Derivation of triangular numbers from a left-justified Pascal's triangle.
  Triangular numbers
  5-simplex numbers
  6-simplex numbers
  7-simplex numbers

The triangular numbers are given by the following explicit formulas:

where is notation for a binomial coefficient. It represents the number of distinct pairs that can be selected from n + 1 objects, and it is read aloud as "n plus one choose two".

The fact that the th triangular number equals can be illustrated using a visual proof.[1] For every triangular number , imagine a "half-rectangle" arrangement of objects corresponding to the triangular number, as in the figure below. Copying this arrangement and rotating it to create a rectangular figure doubles the number of objects, producing a rectangle with dimensions , which is also the number of objects in the rectangle. Clearly, the triangular number itself is always exactly half of the number of objects in such a figure, or: . The example follows:

(green plus yellow) implies that (green).   

This formula can be proven formally using mathematical induction.[2] It is clearly true for :

Now assume that, for some natural number , . Adding to this yields

so if the formula is true for , it is true for . Since it is clearly true for , it is therefore true for , , and ultimately all natural numbers by induction.

The German mathematician and scientist, Carl Friedrich Gauss, is said to have found this relationship in his early youth, by multiplying n/2 pairs of numbers in the sum by the values of each pair n + 1.[3] However, regardless of the truth of this story, Gauss was not the first to discover this formula, and some find it likely that its origin goes back to the Pythagoreans in the 5th century BC.[4] The two formulas were described by the Irish monk Dicuil in about 816 in his Computus.[5] An English translation of Dicuil's account is available.[6]

Relations to other figurate numbers

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Triangular numbers have a wide variety of relations to other figurate numbers.

Most simply, the sum of two consecutive triangular numbers is a square number, since:[7][8]

with the sum being the square of the difference between the two (and thus the difference of the two being the square root of the sum):

This property, colloquially known as the theorem of Theon of Smyrna,[9] is visually demonstrated in the following sum, which represents as digit sums:

This fact can also be demonstrated graphically by positioning the triangles in opposite directions to create a square:

6 + 10 = 16         10 + 15 = 25    

The double of a triangular number, as in the visual proof from the above section § Formula, is called a pronic number.

There are infinitely many triangular numbers that are also square numbers; e.g., 1, 36, 1225. Some of them can be generated by a simple recursive formula: with

All square triangular numbers are found from the recursion with and

A square whose side length is a triangular number can be partitioned into squares and half-squares whose areas add to cubes. This shows that the square of the nth triangular number is equal to the sum of the first n cube numbers.

Also, the square of the nth triangular number is the same as the sum of the cubes of the integers 1 to n. This can also be expressed as

The sum of the first n triangular numbers is the nth tetrahedral number:

More generally, the difference between the nth m-gonal number and the nth (m + 1)-gonal number is the (n − 1)th triangular number. For example, the sixth heptagonal number (81) minus the sixth hexagonal number (66) equals the fifth triangular number, 15. Every other triangular number is a hexagonal number. Knowing the triangular numbers, one can reckon any centered polygonal number; the nth centered k-gonal number is obtained by the formula

where T is a triangular number.

The positive difference of two triangular numbers is a trapezoidal number.

The pattern found for triangular numbers and for tetrahedral numbers which uses binomial coefficients, can be generalized. This leads to the formula:[10]

The fourth triangular number equals the third tetrahedral number as the nth k-simplex number equals the kth n-simplex number due to the symmetry of Pascal's triangle, and its diagonals being simplex numbers; similarly, the fifth triangular number (15) equals the third pentatope number, and so forth

Other properties

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Triangular numbers correspond to the first-degree case of Faulhaber's formula.

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Proof without words that all hexagonal numbers are odd-sided triangular numbers

Alternating triangular numbers (1, 6, 15, 28, ...) are also hexagonal numbers.

Every even perfect number is triangular (as well as hexagonal), given by the formula where Mp is a Mersenne prime. No odd perfect numbers are known; hence, all known perfect numbers are triangular.

For example, the third triangular number is (3 × 2 =) 6, the seventh is (7 × 4 =) 28, the 31st is (31 × 16 =) 496, and the 127th is (127 × 64 =) 8128.

The final digit of a triangular number is 0, 1, 3, 5, 6, or 8, and thus such numbers never end in 2, 4, 7, or 9. A final 3 must be preceded by a 0 or 5; a final 8 must be preceded by a 2 or 7.

In base 10, the digital root of a nonzero triangular number is always 1, 3, 6, or 9. Hence, every triangular number is either divisible by three or has a remainder of 1 when divided by 9:

0 = 9 × 0
1 = 9 × 0 + 1
3 = 9 × 0 + 3
6 = 9 × 0 + 6
10 = 9 × 1 + 1
15 = 9 × 1 + 6
21 = 9 × 2 + 3
28 = 9 × 3 + 1
36 = 9 × 4
45 = 9 × 5
55 = 9 × 6 + 1
66 = 9 × 7 + 3
78 = 9 × 8 + 6
91 = 9 × 10 + 1
...

The digital root pattern for triangular numbers, repeating every nine terms, as shown above, is "1, 3, 6, 1, 6, 3, 1, 9, 9".

The converse of the statement above is, however, not always true. For example, the digital root of 12, which is not a triangular number, is 3 and divisible by three.

If x is a triangular number, a is an odd square, and b = a − 1/8, then ax + b is also a triangular number. Note that b will always be a triangular number, because 8Tn + 1 = (2n + 1)2, which yields all the odd squares are revealed by multiplying a triangular number by 8 and adding 1, and the process for b given a is an odd square is the inverse of this operation. The first several pairs of this form (not counting 1x + 0) are: 9x + 1, 25x + 3, 49x + 6, 81x + 10, 121x + 15, 169x + 21, ... etc. Given x is equal to Tn, these formulas yield T3n + 1, T5n + 2, T7n + 3, T9n + 4, and so on.

The sum of the reciprocals of all the nonzero triangular numbers is

This can be shown by using the basic sum of a telescoping series:

In addition, the nth partial sum of this series can be written as 2n/n + 1

Two other formulas regarding triangular numbers are and both of which can easily be established either by looking at dot patterns (see above) or with some simple algebra.

In 1796, Gauss discovered that every positive integer is representable as a sum of three triangular numbers, writing in his diary his famous words, "ΕΥΡΗΚΑ! num = Δ + Δ + Δ". The three triangular numbers are not necessarily distinct, or nonzero; for example 20 = 10 + 10 + 0. This is a special case of the Fermat polygonal number theorem.

The largest triangular number of the form 2k − 1 is 4095 (see Ramanujan–Nagell equation).

Wacław Franciszek Sierpiński posed the question as to the existence of four distinct triangular numbers in geometric progression. It was conjectured by Polish mathematician Kazimierz Szymiczek to be impossible and was later proven by Fang and Chen in 2007.[11][12]

Formulas involving expressing an integer as the sum of triangular numbers are connected to theta functions, in particular the Ramanujan theta function.[13][14]

The number of line segments between closest pairs of dots in the triangle can be represented in terms of the number of dots or with a recurrence relation:

In the limit, the ratio between the two numbers, dots and line segments is

Applications

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Proof without words that the number of possible handshakes between n people is the (n−1)th triangular number

The triangular number Tn solves the handshake problem of counting the number of handshakes if each person in a room with n + 1 people shakes hands once with each person. In other words, the solution to the handshake problem of n people is Tn−1.[15]

Equivalently, a fully connected network of n computing devices requires the presence of Tn − 1 cables or other connections.

In a tournament format that uses a round-robin group stage, the number of matches that need to be played between n teams is equal to the triangular number Tn − 1. For example, a group stage with 4 teams requires 6 matches, and a group stage with 8 teams requires 28 matches. This is also equivalent to the handshake problem and fully connected network problems.

The maximum number of pieces, p obtainable with n straight cuts is the n-th triangular number plus one, forming the lazy caterer's sequence (OEIS A000124)

One way of calculating the depreciation of an asset is the sum-of-years' digits method, which involves finding Tn, where n is the length in years of the asset's useful life. Each year, the item loses (bs) × ny/Tn, where b is the item's beginning value (in units of currency), s is its final salvage value, n is the total number of years the item is usable, and y the current year in the depreciation schedule. Under this method, an item with a usable life of n = 4 years would lose 4/10 of its "losable" value in the first year, 3/10 in the second, 2/10 in the third, and 1/10 in the fourth, accumulating a total depreciation of 10/10 (the whole) of the losable value.

Board game designers Geoffrey Engelstein and Isaac Shalev describe triangular numbers as having achieved "nearly the status of a mantra or koan among game designers", describing them as "deeply intuitive" and "featured in an enormous number of games, [proving] incredibly versatile at providing escalating rewards for larger sets without overly incentivizing specialization to the exclusion of all other strategies".[16]

Relationship between the maximum number of pips on an end of a domino and the number of dominoes in its set
(values in bold are common)
Max. pips 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
n 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Tn 1 3 6 10 15 21 28 36 45 55 66 78 91 105 120 136 153 161 190 210 231 253

Triangular roots and tests for triangular numbers

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By analogy with the square root of x, one can define the (positive) triangular root of x as the number n such that Tn = x:[17]

which follows immediately from the quadratic formula. So an integer x is triangular if and only if 8x + 1 is a square. Equivalently, if the positive triangular root n of x is an integer, then x is the nth triangular number.[17]

Alternative name

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By analogy with the factorial function, a product whose factors are the integers from 1 to n, Donald Knuth proposed the name Termial function,[18] with the notation n? for the sum whose terms are the integers from a to n (the nth triangular number). Although some other sources use this name and notation,[19] they are not in wide use.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Triangular Number Sequence". Math Is Fun.
  2. ^ Spivak, Michael (2008). Calculus (4th ed.). Houston, Texas: Publish or Perish. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-0-914098-91-1.
  3. ^ Hayes, Brian. "Gauss's Day of Reckoning". American Scientist. Computing Science. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
  4. ^ Eves, Howard. "Webpage cites AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF MATHEMATICS". Mathcentral. Retrieved 28 March 2015.
  5. ^ Esposito, M. An unpublished astronomical treatise by the Irish monk Dicuil. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, XXXVI C. Dublin, 1907, 378-446.
  6. ^ Ross, H.E. & Knott, B.I."Dicuil (9th century) on triangular and square numbers." British Journal for the History of Mathematics, 2019,34 (2), 79-94. https://doi.org/10.1080/26375451.2019.1598687.
  7. ^ Beldon, Tom; Gardiner, Tony (2002). "Triangular Numbers and Perfect Squares". The Mathematical Gazette. 86 (507): 423–431. doi:10.2307/3621134. JSTOR 3621134. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  8. ^ Eric W. Weisstein. "Triangular Number". Wolfram MathWorld. Retrieved 2024-04-14. See equations 18 - 20.
  9. ^ Shell-Gellasch, Amy; Thoo, John (October 15, 2015). Algebra in Context: Introductory Algebra from Origins to Applications. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 210. doi:10.1353/book.49475. ISBN 9781421417288.
  10. ^ Baumann, Michael Heinrich (2018-12-12). "Die k-dimensionale Champagnerpyramide" (PDF). Mathematische Semesterberichte (in German). 66: 89–100. doi:10.1007/s00591-018-00236-x. ISSN 1432-1815. S2CID 125426184.
  11. ^ Chen, Fang: Triangular numbers in geometric progression
  12. ^ Fang: Nonexistence of a geometric progression that contains four triangular numbers
  13. ^ Liu, Zhi-Guo (2003-12-01). "An Identity of Ramanujan and the Representation of Integers as Sums of Triangular Numbers". The Ramanujan Journal. 7 (4): 407–434. doi:10.1023/B:RAMA.0000012425.42327.ae. ISSN 1382-4090. S2CID 122221070.
  14. ^ Sun, Zhi-Hong (2016-01-24). "Ramanujan's theta functions and sums of triangular numbers". arXiv:1601.06378 [math.NT].
  15. ^ "The Handshake Problem | National Association of Math Circles". MathCircles.org. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  16. ^ Engelstein, Geoffrey; Shalev, Isaac (2019-06-25). Building Blocks of Tabletop Game Design. doi:10.1201/9780429430701. ISBN 978-0-429-43070-1. S2CID 198342061.
  17. ^ a b Euler, Leonhard; Lagrange, Joseph Louis (1810), Elements of Algebra, vol. 1 (2nd ed.), J. Johnson and Co., pp. 332–335
  18. ^ Knuth, Donald. Sorting and Searching. The Art of Computer Programming. Vol. 3 (3rd ed.). Expression error: Unexpected < operator: Addison-Wesley Professional. p. 48.
  19. ^ Stone, John David (2018), Algorithms for Functional Programming, Springer, p. 282, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-57970-1, ISBN 978-3-662-57968-8, S2CID 53079729
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