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Do we have a nice expression for the following finite series? $$ \sum_{k=0}^{j} \binom{j}{k} \ \frac{(-1)^k}{2k+1}.$$ Any help is really appreciated since I can skip the part concerning the partial sums.

Aleph-null
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We have $$ \frac{1}{2k+1} = \int_0^1 \frac{1}{2} x^{k-1/2} \, dx, $$ so interchanging this integral with the sum, $$ \sum_{k=0}^j \binom{j}{k} (-1)^k \int_0^1 \frac{1}{2} x^{k-1/2} \, dx = \frac{1}{2}\int_0^1 x^{-1/2} \sum_{k=0}^j \binom{j}{k} (-x)^k \, dx = \frac{1}{2}\int_0^1 x^{-1/2} (1-x)^j \, dx. $$ This is a special case of the Beta-function, or we can write it as $$ \frac{1}{2}\int_0^1 x^{-1/2} (1-x)^j \, dx = \binom{j+1/2}{j}^{-1}, $$ which of course expands to $$ \frac{j!}{(j+1/2)(j-1/2) \dotsm (5/2) (3/2)} = \frac{2^j j!}{(2j+1)!!}. $$

Chappers
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  • Nice solution! Can you help me with finding a book covering these materials? – Aleph-null Apr 12 '18 at 04:46
  • Any book on special functions will discuss the Beta-function (Whittaker and Watson's Modern Analysis is a venerable example, but there are many others). A=B is all about hypergeometric series identities, which include binomials as a special case. I'm not sure if those cover exactly what you want. – Chappers Apr 13 '18 at 01:12
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An overkill. From the Melzak's identity $$\sum_{k=0}^{j}\dbinom{j}{k}\left(-1\right)^{k}\frac{f\left(y-k\right)}{k+x}=\frac{f\left(x+y\right)}{x\dbinom{j+x}{j}}$$ where $f$ is an algebraic polynomial up to degree $j$ and $x\neq-k$ we get, taking $f\left(y\right)\equiv1$ and $x=1/2$, that $$\frac{1}{2}\sum_{k=0}^{j}\dbinom{j}{k}\frac{\left(-1\right)^{k}}{k+1/2}=\color{red}{\dbinom{j+1/2}{j}^{-1}}$$

Marco Cantarini
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