Newton's expansion for non-commutative quantities

ShayanJ
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You probably know that for two commutative quantities x and y,we have:
(x+y)^n=\sum_{r=0}^n \left( \begin{array}{c} n \\ r \end{array} \right) x^{n-r} y^r
Now I want to know is there a similar formula for the case when x and y don't commute and we have [x,y]=c and [x,c]=[y,c]=0?
Thanks
 
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In the case of commutative types, the terms can be ordered as x^i y^j, as you showed, because x and y commute.
In general, you will have all sorts of ordering, like xxy, xyx, yxx.
Maybe you can work out the special cases n=2 and n=3, to guess an answer.
 
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