Quasi-polynomial

Summary

In mathematics, a quasi-polynomial (pseudo-polynomial) is a generalization of polynomials. While the coefficients of a polynomial come from a ring, the coefficients of quasi-polynomials are instead periodic functions with integral period. Quasi-polynomials appear throughout much of combinatorics as the enumerators for various objects.

A quasi-polynomial can be written as , where is a periodic function with integral period. If is not identically zero, then the degree of is . Equivalently, a function is a quasi-polynomial if there exist polynomials such that when . The polynomials are called the constituents of .

Examples edit

  • Given a  -dimensional polytope   with rational vertices  , define   to be the convex hull of  . The function   is a quasi-polynomial in   of degree  . In this case,   is a function  . This is known as the Ehrhart quasi-polynomial, named after Eugène Ehrhart.
  • Given two quasi-polynomials   and  , the convolution of   and   is
 
which is a quasi-polynomial with degree  

References edit

  • Stanley, Richard P. (1997). Enumerative Combinatorics, Volume 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-55309-1, 0-521-56069-1.