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The Bernoulli numbers,
, and the Bernoulli
polynomials,
, are defined by the power series
so that
and
.
Some useful facts, that follow straight from these definitions, are that
each
is a rational number,
if n is odd and
, and
for all integers
.
In 1840 Clausen and Von Staudt showed that the denominator of
(n even)
is precisely the product of those primes p for which p-1 divides n;
and further that
for each such p
(actually one also has
).
In 1851 Kummer showed that
for any even integers m and n, satisfying
and
; and one can use this in showing that
whenever
and
.
Recently Almkvist and Meurman [1] observed that
is an integer for any rational number
.
For any positive integers t and n, we have
From this, it is easy to deduce analogues for Bernoulli polynomials
of the Von Staudt--Clausen Theorem and of Kummer's congruences.
We shall assume that
m divides up+v, for given integers
.
By (8.3) we have
for
, provided
with
.
Thus, under these conditions,
and so, from (8.3), we obtain
for primes
provided
.

Contents
Next: Generalization of Morley's
Up: Arithmetic Properties of Binomial
Previous: Sums of Binomial