Could not agree more. I have looked at the link now and what we have here is the same recipe taken out of context. Really, every time one is working with factorial formulae it would be wise to check for this connection.
Carmichael may be using Polignac's formula. That is what it does, I believe.
Factorials are beasts. It is easy enough to see what they are and what they designate for counting (very good description of their role in the multinomial, by the way), but when you want to compare them to something like a power it becomes sticky. One reason I appreciate Wilson's theorem so much is that it relates factorials to powers. That is cool.
It is time to move on. My own urge is toward Borcard or Goldbach. I have learned a lot from Brocard's problem. The Goldbach conjecture, however, is difficult to make even a quarter inch of progress on. I suppose a place to start would be with Ramanujan's amazing formula for summing additive partitions. No one believed such a formula was even possible.
When looking at problems which minds like his have already considered, one can only hope they were in a great hurry that day.



Reply With Quote