In mathematics, and more specifically number theory, the superfactorial of a positive integer is the product of the first factorials. They are a special case of the Jordan–Pólya numbers, which are products of arbitrary collections of factorials.
Definition
The th superfactorial may be defined as:[1]
Following the usual convention for the empty product, the superfactorial of 0 is 1. The sequence of superfactorials, beginning with , is:[1]
1, 1, 2, 12, 288, 34560, 24883200, 125411328000, 5056584744960000, ... (sequence A000178 in the OEIS)
For every integer , the number is a square number. This may be expressed as stating that, in the formula for as a product of factorials, omitting one of the factorials (the middle one, ) results in a square product.[4] Additionally, if any integers are given, the product of their pairwise differences is always a multiple of , and equals the superfactorial when the given numbers are consecutive.[1]