Binomial Theorem: Learn It 1

  • Apply the Binomial Theorem

A polynomial with two terms is called a binomial. We already know how to multiply binomials and to raise binomials to powers, but raising a binomial to a high power can be tedious and time-consuming.

The Binomial Theorem is a powerful tool in counting because it allows us to expand expressions raised to a power, which can then be used to solve problems involving combinations. Specifically, it helps in counting the number of ways to choose a subset of items from a larger set when the order doesn’t matter.

Let’s discuss a shortcut way that will allow us to find [latex](x+y)^n[/latex] without multiplying the binomial by itself [latex]n[/latex] times!

Binomial Coefficients

Have you ever noticed that there’s a pattern to the coefficients when you expand [latex](x+y)^n[/latex]?

These coefficients, known as binomial coefficients, follow a specific pattern that appears in Pascal’s Triangle. Each coefficient represents the number of ways to choose a certain number of terms from the binomial expansion.

binomial coefficients

If [latex]n[/latex] and [latex]r[/latex] are integers greater than or equal to [latex]0[/latex] with [latex]n\ge r[/latex], then the binomial coefficient is

[latex]\left(\begin{gathered}n\\ r\end{gathered}\right)=C\left(n,r\right)=\dfrac{n!}{r!\left(n-r\right)!}[/latex]

Find each binomial coefficient.

  1. [latex]\left(\begin{gathered}5\\ 3\end{gathered}\right)[/latex]
  2. [latex]\left(\begin{gathered}9\\ 2\end{gathered}\right)[/latex]
  3. [latex]\left(\begin{gathered}9\\ 7\end{gathered}\right)[/latex]

The patterns that emerge from calculating binomial coefficients and that are present in Pascal’s Triangle are handy and should be memorized over time as mathematical facts much in the same way that you just “know” [latex]4[/latex] and [latex]3[/latex] make [latex]7[/latex]. Of course, that will take a lot of time and patient practice. If you are continuing in mathematics beyond this course, it will be well worth the effort.