In my previous post in this series, we defined the function

and showed that
. Today we’ll show the surprising fact that, for every positive integer
, although
and
are not necessarily zero, they are always integers. (The notation
means the
th derivative of
; that is, take the derivative of
, then the derivative of that, then the derivative of that, …
times.) Put more succinctly: every derivative of
takes on integer values at
and
.
Why might this be surprising? It’s surprising because of the
in the denominator of
. For example, consider the function (which I just made up):

It’s easy to see that
. But let’s take the derivative:
so
, which is clearly not an integer. For the derivatives of
to always give an integer at
(let alone at
) there must be some fancy canceling going on!
For now we will consider only
(we’ll come back to
later). Of course, substituting
for
causes every term containing
to disappear, so
is just the constant term of
. Hence, we must show that the constant term of
is always an integer.
Consider the numerator of
, that is,

Note that
, when expanded out, is a polynomial of the form
, where the ellipsis contains a bunch of terms with integer coefficients and powers of
between 1 and
. (In fact, we could use the Binomial Theorem to compute the precise coefficients—but it really doesn’t matter; all we will care about is that they are integers.) Multiplying by
, we see that

so
is a polynomial with terms of degree
through
, and hence so is
, since dividing by
changes the coefficients but not the exponents. (Note that
has no constant term, so
—but we already knew that.)
Recall that the derivative of
is
, so taking the derivative of a polynomial reduces each of the exponents by one. So the first derivative of
is a polynomial with terms of degree
through
(and hence a constant term of zero); the second derivative has terms of degree
through
(still no constant term); and so on. We can see that none of the first
derivatives of
will have a constant term, so
(which is certainly an integer) for
. What about the
th derivative and higher? This is where the fancy canceling comes in!
As we noted above, when expanded out
is a sum of a bunch of terms of the form

where
and
is some integer. When we take the derivative, this term will turn into
; if we take the derivative again, it will become
; another derivative gives us
, and so on. Do you see what is happening? After taking the derivative exactly
times, we will end up with the constant term

and here’s our fancy canceling:
is clearly divisible by
, so this is some integer times
, which is also an integer. Voila! Said a different way, and more succinctly: since each term of
has degree at least
, by the time we have taken the derivative enough times for it to yield a constant term, the
will be canceled from the denominator, since we will have taken the derivative at least at each power of
from
down to
.
Finally, if we take the derivative of
more than
times, we get
, so no problems there.
Great, so
is always an integer. But what about
? Well, remember, last time we showed that
. If we take the derivative of both sides with respect to
(being careful to use the chain rule on the left side, noting that the derivative of
with respect to
is
), we get

We can repeat this process to find that
(the two negatives cancel on the left side),
, and so on. But the extra negative sign for odd derivatives doesn’t really matter: in either case,
, which is an integer.
Getting closer! Next time, we will define another special function
in terms of
and its derivatives; this function
will help us compute
—which (if you recall the punchline) will turn out to be an integer strictly between
and
(which is impossible).