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Explicit formula for multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers

Tomoko Kikuchi, Maki Nakasuji

Abstract

The classical Bernoulli numbers $B_m$ can be expressed using Stirling numbers of the second kind, and M. Kaneko extended this framework by defining poly-Bernoulli numbers ${\mathbb B}_m^{(k)}$, for which explicit formulas using the Stirling numbers of the second kind and duality relations were obtained. Later, Kaneko and H. Tsumura introduced multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers ${\mathbb B}_{m_1, \ldots, m_r}^{(k_1, \ldots, k_r)}$ using the multiple polylogarithm and reached their duality properties via an associated $η$-function. Explicit formulas for double-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers ${\mathbb B}_{m_1, m_2}^{(k_1, k_2)}$ were obtained by Y. Baba, M. Nakasuji, and M. Sakata. In this article, we extend these results to general multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers and use it to give an alternative proof of the duality of multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers.

Explicit formula for multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers

Abstract

The classical Bernoulli numbers can be expressed using Stirling numbers of the second kind, and M. Kaneko extended this framework by defining poly-Bernoulli numbers , for which explicit formulas using the Stirling numbers of the second kind and duality relations were obtained. Later, Kaneko and H. Tsumura introduced multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers using the multiple polylogarithm and reached their duality properties via an associated -function. Explicit formulas for double-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers were obtained by Y. Baba, M. Nakasuji, and M. Sakata. In this article, we extend these results to general multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers and use it to give an alternative proof of the duality of multi-indexed poly-Bernoulli numbers.
Paper Structure (5 sections, 13 theorems, 59 equations)

This paper contains 5 sections, 13 theorems, 59 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

For $m \in \mathbb{Z}_{\ge 0}$, we have Here, ${m \brace \ell}$ is a Stirling number of the second kind, which is defined in Section Section2.

Theorems & Definitions (22)

  • Theorem 1.1
  • Theorem 1.2: Kaneko, Theorem 1
  • Theorem 1.3: Kaneko, Corollary
  • Remark 1.4
  • Theorem 1.5: KT, Theorem 5.4
  • Remark 1.6
  • Theorem 1.7: BNS, Theorem 9
  • Theorem 1.8
  • Lemma 2.1
  • Lemma 2.2
  • ...and 12 more