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The term figurate number is used by different writers for members of different sets of numbers, generalizing from triangular numbers to different shapes (polygonal numbers) and different dimensions (polyhedral numbers). The term can mean * polygonal number * a number represented as a discrete -dimensional regular
geometric Geometry (; ) is, with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. It is concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. A mathematician who works in the field of geometry is ca ...
pattern of -dimensional balls such as a polygonal number (for ) or a polyhedral number (for ). * a member of the subset of the sets above containing only triangular numbers, pyramidal numbers, and their analogs in other dimensions.


Terminology

Some kinds of figurate number were discussed in the 16th and 17th centuries under the name "figural number". In historical works about
Greek mathematics Greek mathematics refers to mathematics texts and ideas stemming from the Archaic through the Hellenistic and Roman periods, mostly extant from the 7th century BC to the 4th century AD, around the shores of the Eastern Mediterranean. Greek mathem ...
the preferred term used to be ''figured number''. In a use going back to Jacob Bernoulli's Ars Conjectandi, the term ''figurate number'' is used for triangular numbers made up of successive integers, tetrahedral numbers made up of successive triangular numbers, etc. These turn out to be the
binomial coefficient In mathematics, the binomial coefficients are the positive integers that occur as coefficients in the binomial theorem. Commonly, a binomial coefficient is indexed by a pair of integers and is written \tbinom. It is the coefficient of the t ...
s. In this usage the square numbers (4, 9, 16, 25, ...) would not be considered figurate numbers when viewed as arranged in a square. A number of other sources use the term ''figurate number'' as synonymous for the polygonal numbers, either just the usual kind or both those and the centered polygonal numbers.


History

The mathematical study of figurate numbers is said to have originated with Pythagoras, possibly based on Babylonian or Egyptian precursors. Generating whichever class of figurate numbers the Pythagoreans studied using gnomons is also attributed to Pythagoras. Unfortunately, there is no trustworthy source for these claims, because all surviving writings about the Pythagoreans are from centuries later. Speusippus is the earliest source to expose the view that ten, as the fourth triangular number, was in fact the tetractys, supposed to be of great importance for Pythagoreanism. Figurate numbers were a concern of the Pythagorean worldview. It was well understood that some numbers could have many figurations, e.g. 36 is a both a square and a triangle and also various rectangles. The modern study of figurate numbers goes back to Pierre de Fermat, specifically the Fermat polygonal number theorem. Later, it became a significant topic for
Euler Leonhard Euler ( , ; 15 April 170718 September 1783) was a Swiss mathematician, physicist, astronomer, geographer, logician and engineer who founded the studies of graph theory and topology and made pioneering and influential discoveries in ma ...
, who gave an explicit formula for all triangular numbers that are also perfect squares, among many other discoveries relating to figurate numbers. Figurate numbers have played a significant role in modern recreational mathematics. In research mathematics, figurate numbers are studied by way of the Ehrhart polynomials, polynomials that count the number of integer points in a polygon or polyhedron when it is expanded by a given factor.


Triangular numbers and their analogs in higher dimensions

The triangular numbers for are the result of the juxtaposition of the linear numbers (linear gnomons) for : These are the binomial coefficients \textstyle \binom . This is the case of the fact that the th diagonal of Pascal's triangle for consists of the figurate numbers for the -dimensional analogs of triangles (-dimensional simplices). The simplicial polytopic numbers for are: *P_1(n) = \frac = \binom=\binom (linear numbers), *P_2(n) = \frac = \binom ( triangular numbers), *P_3(n) = \frac = \binom ( tetrahedral numbers), *P_4(n) = \frac = \binom (pentachoric numbers, pentatopic numbers, 4-simplex numbers), \qquad\vdots *P_r(n) = \frac = \binom (-topic numbers, -
simplex In geometry, a simplex (plural: simplexes or simplices) is a generalization of the notion of a triangle or tetrahedron to arbitrary dimensions. The simplex is so-named because it represents the simplest possible polytope in any given dimension. ...
numbers). The terms '' square number'' and '' cubic number'' derive from their geometric representation as a square or
cube In geometry, a cube is a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six square faces, facets or sides, with three meeting at each vertex. Viewed from a corner it is a hexagon and its net is usually depicted as a cross. The cube is the only r ...
. The difference of two positive triangular numbers is a trapezoidal number.


Gnomon

The gnomon is the piece added to a figurate number to transform it to the next larger one. For example, the gnomon of the square number is the
odd number In mathematics, parity is the property of an integer of whether it is even or odd. An integer is even if it is a multiple of two, and odd if it is not.. For example, −4, 0, 82 are even because \begin -2 \cdot 2 &= -4 \\ 0 \cdot 2 &= 0 \\ 41 ...
, of the general form , . The square of size 8 composed of gnomons looks like this: To transform from the ''-square'' (the square of size ) to the -square, one adjoins elements: one to the end of each row ( elements), one to the end of each column ( elements), and a single one to the corner. For example, when transforming the 7-square to the 8-square, we add 15 elements; these adjunctions are the 8s in the above figure. This gnomonic technique also provides a mathematical proof that the sum of the first odd numbers is ; the figure illustrates = 64 = 82.


Notes


References

* * * * * * {{Authority control Integer sequences