English

Infinite log-concavity: developments and conjectures

Combinatorics 2012-02-01 v2

Abstract

Given a sequence (a_k) = a_0, a_1, a_2,... of real numbers, define a new sequence L(a_k) = (b_k) where b_k = a_k^2 - a_{k-1} a_{k+1}. So (a_k) is log-concave if and only if (b_k) is a nonnegative sequence. Call (a_k) "infinitely log-concave" if L^i(a_k) is nonnegative for all i >= 1. Boros and Moll conjectured that the rows of Pascal's triangle are infinitely log-concave. Using a computer and a stronger version of log-concavity, we prove their conjecture for the nth row for all n <= 1450. We also use our methods to give a simple proof of a recent result of Uminsky and Yeats about regions of infinite log-concavity. We investigate related questions about the columns of Pascal's triangle, q-analogues, symmetric functions, real-rooted polynomials, and Toeplitz matrices. In addition, we offer several conjectures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0808.1065,
  title  = {Infinite log-concavity: developments and conjectures},
  author = {Peter R. W. McNamara and Bruce E. Sagan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0808.1065},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

21 pages. Minor changes and additional references. Final version, to appear in Advances in Applied Mathematics

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:08:32.103Z