Summation of Products of Binomial Coefficients

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Homework Statement



Find and prove a formula for sum{ (m1 choose r)(m2 choose s)(m3 choose t) }

where the sum is over all nonnegative integers r, s, ant t with fixed sum r + s + t = n.

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution



I first attempted to find the number of combinations of r, s, and t would satisfy r + s + t = n.
I found this to be (n+1)(n+2)/2. I have a feeling this is important (it gives the number of terms in the summation), but can't seem to find a way to apply it to find a formula.
 
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Rather than trying to evaluate this sum using algebra, try to find a combinatorial model for it -- a scenario where the sum you have is obviously the number of different ways to do something. Then count that model in a simpler way.
 
Prove $$\int\limits_0^{\sqrt2/4}\frac{1}{\sqrt{x-x^2}}\arcsin\sqrt{\frac{(x-1)\left(x-1+x\sqrt{9-16x}\right)}{1-2x}} \, \mathrm dx = \frac{\pi^2}{8}.$$ Let $$I = \int\limits_0^{\sqrt 2 / 4}\frac{1}{\sqrt{x-x^2}}\arcsin\sqrt{\frac{(x-1)\left(x-1+x\sqrt{9-16x}\right)}{1-2x}} \, \mathrm dx. \tag{1}$$ The representation integral of ##\arcsin## is $$\arcsin u = \int\limits_{0}^{1} \frac{\mathrm dt}{\sqrt{1-t^2}}, \qquad 0 \leqslant u \leqslant 1.$$ Plugging identity above into ##(1)## with ##u...

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