I've poked around Mathematics Stack Exchange for a while, and while I'm sure this is an elementary problem to you guys, I cannot figure this out. I have found similar solved problem prompts on here, but the issue is that I cannot use Rodrigues' Formula or the generating function, I have to use the definition of a Legendre polynomial itself. What I'm trying to do is show the following (here is the original prompt):
$\text{From the definition of a Legendre polynomial show that} $ $$ P_{2n}(0)=(-1)^{n}\frac{(2n)!}{2^{2n}(n!)^2} $$
Here was my attempt so far:
$$ \text{Definition:} \ \ \ P_n(x)=\frac{1}{2^n} \sum_{k=0}^{M}\frac{(-1)^k(2n-2k)!}{k!(n-k)!(n-2k)!}x^{n-2k} $$ $\\$ $$ P_{2n}(x)=\frac{1}{2^{2n}}\sum_{k=0}^{M}\frac{(-1)^k(4n-2k)!}{k!(2n-k)!(2n-2k)!}x^{2n-2k} $$ $$ P_{2n}(0)=\frac{1}{2^{2n}}\sum_{k=0}^{M}\frac{(-1)^k(4n-2k)!}{k!(2n-k)!(2n-2k)!}(0)^{2n-2k} $$
Here my confusion is that it looks like evaluating x at zero would make every single term disappear ($x^{2n-2k}=0$). Have I made a mistake, or how do I deal with this?
This is going to sound dumb, but how do we have 0^0? I see 0^{2n-2k}, but I do not understand how 2n-2k=0.
Edit: Just saw your remark on letting k=n, that makes sense now. Thank you.
– DUTCHBAT III Apr 03 '15 at 01:41I constantly shy away from trying substitution on my own because I feel like additional constraints that weren't specified in the prompt are being written in, and as a result, dealing with dummy variables/index shifts and stuff like this, I really suffer.
Why am I "allowed" to make the substitution k=n?
– DUTCHBAT III Apr 03 '15 at 01:54