So "everybody knows" that the nth Catalan number is given by , and furthermore that they have the asymptotic form
(Okay, I'll confess: I knew the first term, and I got Maple to calculate the others just now.)
So I found myself wondering -- why this n-3/2? Let Dn = 4-n Cn. Then and so we get ; furthermore that sum is about -(3/2) log n, for large n, and so Dn is about n-3/2. The replacement of 1-x with exp(-x) obviously would need to be justified (and such justification would explain the presence of the mysterious π) but I'm still amused that this simple computation got the exponent.
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3 comments:
Can you use Stirling's formula to get the asymptotic expression?
Yes, Stirling's formula will work. (More generally, I know how to derive this series without using Maple, and could post about it, but the original post was something I quickly dashed off before going to a talk and so I didn't want to get into details that would likely be incorrect.)
Indeed, Stirling's Formula gets you the first term, including the root pi, effortlessly.
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