In a standard $52$ card deck of playing cards, a set of $4$ cards is a Badugi if it contains $4$ cards with no pairs and no two cards of the same suit.
Let $f(n)$ be the number of ways to choose $n$ cards with a $4$ card subset that is a Badugi. For example, there are $2598960$ ways to choose five cards from a standard $52$ card deck, of which $514800$ contain a $4$ card subset that is a Badugi, so $f(5) = 514800$.
Find $\sum f(n)$ for $4 \le n \le 13$.
The function $f(n)$ is defined as the number of ways to choose $n$ cards from a standard $52$ card deck where at least 1 subset of the $n$ cards is a Badugi.
A Badugi is a set of 4 different rank cards from 4 different suits. Therefore there are $^{13}C_{4}$ ways to choose such a set, as each suit has 13 different ranks. And there are $4!$ ways to assign the 4 suits to these 4 cards.
To calculate $f(n)$ – the number of ways to choose $n$ cards with a $4$ card subset that is a Badugi, we can first choose 4 cards to form a Badugi, and then choose the remaining ($n$ – 4) cards from the remaining 48 cards. But this overcounts the possibilities where we have more than one Badugi in the $n$ cards, so we have to subtract the overcounting.
These overcounts happen when $n \ge 8$. If we choose 8 cards with 2 Badugis, we subtract this, but if we choose 12 cards with 3 Badugis, we subtract it twice and need to add it back once. Therefore, we use the principle of Inclusion-Exclusion.
Hence, $f(n) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{(n-4)} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{(n-8)} + ^{13}C_{12}\cdot (4!)^3\cdot ^{40}C_{(n-12)}$.
Now, calculate $f(n)$ for $n = 4$ to $13$, and plug into the formula to get:
$f(4) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{0} – 0 + 0 = 685464$.
$f(5) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{1} – 0 + 0 = 15432400$.
$f(6) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{2} – 0 + 0 = 198419712$.
$f(7) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{3} – 0 + 0 = 1833452736$.
$f(8) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{4} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{0} + 0 = 12731165248$.
$f(9) =^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{5} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{1} + 0 = 73697221200$.
$f(10)=^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{6} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{2} + 0 = 362885958340$.
$f(11)=^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{7} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{3} + 0 = 1523195243730$.
$f(12)=^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{8} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{4} + 0 = 5616215090360$
$f(13)=^{13}C_{4} \cdot 4! \cdot ^{48}C_{9} – ^{13}C_{8}\cdot (4!)^2\cdot ^{44}C_{5} + ^{13}C_{12}\cdot (4!)^3\cdot ^{40}C_{1}$ = $18742157281200$.
The sum of $f(n)$ for $4 \le n \le 13$ is around $26886836406912$.
This answer is obtained through calculations, but these might involve significant trial and error and require some expertise with combinatorics and the principle of Inclusion-Exclusion.
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