Fibonacci Cubed Recurrence Relation

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SUMMARY

The Fibonacci cubed sequence follows the recurrence relation Gn = 3Gn-1 + 6Gn-2 - 3Gn-3 - Gn-4. This relation was derived from the observation of the sequence formed by cubing each element of the Fibonacci sequence, resulting in Gn values of 0, 1, 1, 8, 27, 125, 512, etc. The derivation of this relation can be approached through mathematical induction or by exploring related sequences, such as the Fibonacci square sequence, which has a proven recurrence relation. The foundational work on this topic was published by Zeitlin and Parker in the Fibonacci Quarterly in 1963.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Fibonacci sequences
  • Knowledge of recurrence relations
  • Familiarity with mathematical induction
  • Basic LaTeX formatting for mathematical expressions
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the Fibonacci Quarterly publication by Zeitlin and Parker for foundational proofs
  • Learn about the recurrence relation for the Fibonacci square sequence
  • Explore mathematical induction techniques for proving recurrence relations
  • Study advanced properties of Fibonacci sequences and their applications in combinatorics
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Mathematics students, educators, and researchers interested in advanced recurrence relations and Fibonacci sequences.

alec_tronn
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Homework Statement


Find and prove the recurrence relation for the Fibonacci cubed sequence.

Homework Equations


By observation (blankly staring at the sequence for an hour) I've decided that the recurrence relation is G_{n} = 3G_{n-1} + 6G_{n-2} - 3G_{n-3} - G_{n-4}

(where G is Fibonacci cubed)

The Attempt at a Solution


My attempt was going to be to prove by induction, but for the n+1 case, I got:
G_{n+1} = G_{n} + F_{n}*F_{n+1}*F_{n-1} + G_{n-1}

Is there an identity that could get me further? Is there a different method anyone could suggest? Is there anything I can do at all?

edit: all that superscript is supposed to be subscript... I'm not sure what happened...
 
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I fear your question is esoteric enough that help will be hard to find without a definition of "fibonacci cubed" (or more specifically the sequence, since you do not know the relation). It doesn't seem like a hard question - just an obscure one. (Amusingly enough the first google result for "fibonacci cubed" is this thread!)

My guess is LaTeX fouled up because you didn't properly anchor the subscripts to something.
 
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Since the Fibonacci sequence is 0,1,1,2,3,5,8,... the Fibonacci Cubed sequence is 0,1,1,8,27,125,512... it's just cubing each element of the Fibonacci sequence. Upon further research, I found that that rule was found and proven by Zeitlin and Parker and published in the Fibonacci Quarterly in 1963... not that I have access to that publication, but if any of you do, or find out how it was done, or have any advice, it'd be greatly appreciated!
 
I think an easier approach would be to solve a simpler case first. Have you tried deriving the equation for a "fibonacci square" sequence? I assume a similar approach would follow for your case:

Let H_n denote the nth fibonacci square

H_n = (F_n)^2 = (F_{n-1}+F_{n-2})^2 = H_{n-1} + H_{n-2} + 2F_{n-1}F_{n-2}

Using the substitution selectively that F_{n-1} = F_{n-2} + F_{n-3}, H_{n-1}+H_{n-2}+2F_{n-1}F_{n-2}=H_{n-1}+H_{n-2}+2(F_{n-2}+F_{n-3})F_{n-2} = H_{n-1}+H_{n-2}+2(F_{n-2})^2 + 2F_{n-2}F_{n-3}.

The trick is then to add and subtract (F_{n-3})^2:

H_{n-1}+2H_{n-2}+(F_{n-2})^2 + 2F_{n-2}F_{n-3} + (F_{n-3})^2 - (F_{n-3})^2 = 2H_{n-1}+2H_{n-2}-H_{n-3}.
 
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