Candido's identity explained

__notoc__Candido's identity, named after the Italian mathematician Giacomo Candido, is an identity for real numbers. It states that for two arbitrary real numbers

x

and

y

the following equality holds:[1]

\left[x2+y2+(x+y)2\right]2=2[x4+y4+(x+y)4]

The identity however is not restricted to real numbers but holds in every commutative ring.[1]

Candido originally devised the identity to prove the following identity for Fibonacci numbers:[2]

2)
(f
n+2
4)
n+2

Proof

A straightforward algebraic proof can be attained by simply completely expanding both sides of the equation. The identity however can also be interpreted geometrically. In this case it states that the area of square with side length

x2+y2+(x+y)2

equals twice the sum of areas of three squares with side lengths

x2

,

y2

and

(x+y)2

. This allows for the following proof due to Roger B. Nelsen:[3] .

Further reading

External links

References

  1. Claudi Alsina, Roger B. Nelsen: "On Candido's Identity". In: Mathematics Magazine, Volume 80, no. 3 (June, 2007), pp. 226-228
  2. Thomas Koshy: Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers with Applications. Wiley, 2001,, pp. 92, 299-300
  3. Roger B. Nelsen: Proof without Words: Candido's Identity. In: Mathematics Magazine, volume 78, no. 2 (April, 2005), p. 131 (JSTOR)