This was proved by Gauss in Disquisitiones Arithmeticae,
as follows:\
If we pair up each m in the product with its inverse
then we see that
is congruent, modulo
, to the product of
those
that are not distinct from their inverses
,
that is those m for which
. It is
easy to show that the only such m are 1 and
unless
(when one only has m=1) or
when one has the additional
solutions
and
. The result follows.
We may deduce from Lemma 1 the following
Corollary 1. For any given prime power let
be the least non-negative residue of
.
Then
Proof: Write each r in the product below as , to get
In 1808 Legendre showed that the exact power of p dividing is
Let r = n-m and write each of
n, m and r in base p. Let if there is a `carry'
in the jth digit when adding m and r in base p, let
otherwise (including
).
We use (2.3) to deduce
Kummer's Theorem. The power to which prime
p divides the binomial coefficient is given
by the number of `carries' when we add m and n-m in base p.
Proof:
One can easily check that, for each integer ,
By a similar argument we also have, for each , that
The improvement, (1.2), of Lucas' Theorem is easily deduced from the equation
With definitions as in Theorem 1, we have, for any given ,
Proposition 1. For any integer n and prime power ,
we have
Theorem 1 then follows from dividing the equation in Proposition 1 by
the corresponding ones for m and r, and then using (2.4) to sort
out the exponents of and p.