Everything about Alternating Factorial totally explained
In
mathematics, an
alternating factorial is the
absolute value of the
alternating sum of the first
n factorials.
This is the same as their sum, with the odd-indexed factorials multiplied by
−1 if
n is even, and the even-indexed factorials multiplied by −1 if
n is odd, resulting in an alternation of signs of the summands (or alternation of addition and subtraction operators, if preferred). To put it algebraically,
»
in which af(1) = 1.
The first few alternating factorials are
» 1,
1,
5,
19,
101, 619, 4421, 35899, 326981, 3301819, 36614981, 442386619, 5784634181, 81393657019
For example, the third alternating factorial is 1! − 2! + 3!. The fourth alternating factorial is −1! + 2! - 3! + 4! = 19. Regardless of the parity of
n, the last (
nth) summand,
n!, is given a positive sign, the (
n - 1)
th summand is given a negative sign, and the signs of the lower-indexed summands are alternated accordingly.
This pattern of alternation ensures the resulting sums are all positive integers. Changing the rule so that either the odd- or even-indexed summands are given negative signs (regardless of the parity of
n) changes the signs of the resulting sums but not their absolute values.
Miodrag Zivković proved in 1999 that there are only a finite number of alternating factorials that are also
prime numbers, since 3612703 divides af(3612702) and therefore divides af(
n) for all
n ≥ 3612702.
As of 2006, the known primes and
probable primes are af(
n) for
» n = 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 15, 19, 41, 59, 61, 105, 160, 661, 2653, 3069, 3943, 4053, 4998, 8275, 9158, 11164
Only the values up to
n = 661 have been proved prime in 2006. af(661) is approximately 7.818097272875 × 10
1578.
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