Lucas sequence

Not to be confused with the sequence of Lucas numbers, which is a particular Lucas sequence.

In mathematics, the Lucas sequences and are certain constant-recursive integer sequences that satisfy the recurrence relation

where and are fixed integers. Any sequence satisfying this recurrence relation can be represented as a linear combination of the Lucas sequences and .

More generally, Lucas sequences and represent sequences of polynomials in and with integer coefficients.

Famous examples of Lucas sequences include the Fibonacci numbers, Mersenne numbers, Pell numbers, Lucas numbers, Jacobsthal numbers, and a superset of Fermat numbers. Lucas sequences are named after the French mathematician Édouard Lucas.

Recurrence relations

Given two integer parameters P and Q, the Lucas sequences of the first kind Un(P,Q) and of the second kind Vn(P,Q) are defined by the recurrence relations:

and

It is not hard to show that for ,

Examples

Initial terms of Lucas sequences Un(P,Q) and Vn(P,Q) are given in the table:

Explicit expressions

The characteristic equation of the recurrence relation for Lucas sequences and is:

It has the discriminant and the roots:

Thus:

Note that the sequence and the sequence also satisfy the recurrence relation. However these might not be integer sequences.

Distinct roots

When , a and b are distinct and one quickly verifies that

.

It follows that the terms of Lucas sequences can be expressed in terms of a and b as follows

Repeated root

The case occurs exactly when for some integer S so that . In this case one easily finds that

.

Properties

Generating functions

The ordinary generating functions are

Sequences with the same discriminant

If the Lucas sequences and have discriminant , then the sequences based on and where

have the same discriminant: .

Pell equations

When , the Lucas sequences and satisfy certain Pell equations:

Other relations

The terms of Lucas sequences satisfy relations that are generalizations of those between Fibonacci numbers and Lucas numbers . For example:

Among the consequences is that is a multiple of , i.e., the sequence is a divisibility sequence. This implies, in particular, that can be prime only when n is prime. Another consequence is an analog of exponentiation by squaring that allows fast computation of for large values of n. Further divisibility properties are follows:[1]

The last fact generalizes Fermat's little theorem. These facts are used in the Lucas–Lehmer primality test. The converse of the last fact does not hold, as the converse of Fermat's little theorem does not hold. There exists a composite n relatively prime to D and dividing , where . Such a composite is called Lucas pseudoprime.

A prime factor of a term in a Lucas sequence that does not divide any earlier term in the sequence is called primitive. Carmichael's theorem states that all but finitely many of the terms in a Lucas sequence have a primitive prime factor(Yubuta 2001). Indeed, Carmichael (1913) showed that if D is positive and n is not 1, 2 or 6, then has a primitive prime factor. In the case D is negative, a deep result of Bilu, Hanrot, Voutier and Mignotte[2] shows that if n > 30, then has a primitive prime factor and determines all cases has no primitive prime factor.

Specific names

The Lucas sequences for some values of P and Q have specific names:

Un(1,1) : Fibonacci numbers
Vn(1,1) : Lucas numbers
Un(2,1) : Pell numbers
Vn(2,1) : Companion Pell numbers or Pell-Lucas numbers
Un(1,2) : Jacobsthal numbers
Vn(1,2) : Jacobsthal-Lucas numbers
Un(3, 2) : Mersenne numbers 2n  1
Vn(3, 2) : Numbers of the form 2n + 1, which include the Fermat numbers (Yubuta 2001).
Un(x,1) : Fibonacci polynomials
Vn(x,1) : Lucas polynomials
Un(2x, 1) : Chebyshev polynomials of second kind
Vn(2x, 1) : Chebyshev polynomials of first kind multiplied by 2
Un(x+1, x) : Repunits base x
Vn(x+1, x) : xn + 1

Some Lucas sequences have entries in the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences:

-1 3 A214733
1 -1 A000045 A000032
1 1 A128834 A087204
1 2 A107920
2 -1 A000129 A002203
2 1 A001477
2 2 A009545 A007395
2 3 A088137
2 4 A088138
2 5 A045873
3 -5 A015523 A072263
3 -4 A015521 A201455
3 -3 A030195 A172012
3 -2 A007482 A206776
3 -1 A006190 A006497
3 1 A001906 A005248
3 2 A000225 A000051
3 5 A190959
4 -3 A015530 A080042
4 -2 A090017
4 -1 A001076 A014448
4 1 A001353 A003500
4 2 A007070 A056236
4 3 A003462 A034472
4 4 A001787
5 -3 A015536
5 -2 A015535
5 -1 A052918 A087130
5 1 A004254 A003501
5 4 A002450 A052539

Applications

See also

Notes

  1. For such relations and divisibility properties, see Carmichael (1913), Lehmer (1930) or 2. IV of Ribenboim (1996).
  2. Bilu, Yuri; Hanrot, Guillaume; Voutier, Paul M.; Mignotte, Maurice (2001). "Existence of primitive divisors of Lucas and Lehmer numbers". J. Reine Angew. Math. 539: 75–122. doi:10.1515/crll.2001.080. MR 1863855.
  3. John Brillhart; Derrick Henry Lehmer; John Selfridge (April 1975). "New Primality Criteria and Factorizations of 2^m ± 1". Mathematics of Computation. 29 (130): 620–647. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1975-0384673-1.
  4. P. J. Smith; M. J. J. Lennon (1993). "LUC: A new public key system". Proceedings of the Ninth IFIP Int. Symp. on Computer Security: 103–117.
  5. D. Bleichenbacher; W. Bosma; A. K. Lenstra (1995). "Some Remarks on Lucas-Based Cryptosystems" (PDF). Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 963: 386–396. doi:10.1007/3-540-44750-4_31.

References

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