Bell numbers
The Bell numbers, named in honor of Eric Temple Bell, are a sequence of integers arising in combinatorics that begins thus:
The Bell numbers satisfy this recursion formula:
Each Bell number is a sum of "Stirling numbers of the second kind"
In general, Bn is the number of partitions of a set of size n. (B0 is 1 because there is exactly one partition of the empty set. A partition of a set S is by definition a set of nonempty sets whose union is S. Every member of the empty set is a nonempty set (that is vacuously true), and their union is the empty set. Therefore, the empty set is the only partition of itself.)
They also satisfy "Dobinski's formula":
And they satisfy "Touchard's congruence": If p is any prime number then
The Stirling number S(n, k) is the number of ways to partition a set of cardinality n into exactly k nonempty subsets.