#5195. Problem 3. Circus

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Problem 3. Circus

Problem 3. Circus

USACO 2020 US Open Contest, Platinum

The NN cows of Farmer John's Circus (1N1051 \leq N \leq 10^5) are preparing their upcoming acts. The acts all take place on a tree with vertices labeled 1N1\ldots N. The "starting state" of an act is defined by a number 1KN1 \leq K \leq N and an assignment of cows 1K1\dots K to the vertices of the tree, so that no two cows are located at the same vertex.

In an act, the cows make an arbitrarily large number of "moves." In a move, a single cow moves from her current vertex to an unoccupied adjacent vertex. Two starting states are said to be equivalent if one may be reached from the other by some sequence of moves.

For each 1KN1 \leq K \leq N, help the cows determine the number of equivalence classes of starting states: that is, the maximum number of starting states they can pick such that no two are equivalent. Since these numbers may be very large, output their remainders modulo 109+710^9 + 7.

INPUT FORMAT (file circus.in):

Line 11 contains NN.

Lines 2iN2\le i\le N each contain two integers aia_i and bib_i denoting an edge between aia_i and bib_i in the tree.

OUTPUT FORMAT (file circus.out):

For each 1iN,1\le i\le N, the ii-th line of output should contain the answer for K=iK=i modulo 109+710^9+7.

SAMPLE INPUT:


5
1 2
2 3
3 4
3 5

SAMPLE OUTPUT:


1
1
3
24
120

For K=1K=1 and K=2,K=2, any two states can be transformed into one another.

Now consider K=3K=3, and let cic_i denote the location of cow ii. The state (c1,c2,c3)=(1,2,3)(c_1,c_2,c_3)=(1,2,3) is equivalent to the states (1,2,5)(1,2,5) and (1,3,2).(1,3,2). However, it is not equivalent to the state (2,1,3).(2,1,3).

SAMPLE INPUT:


8
1 3
2 3
3 4
4 5
5 6
6 7
6 8

SAMPLE OUTPUT:


1
1
1
6
30
180
5040
40320

SCORING: Test cases 3-4 satisfy N8.N\le 8.Test cases 5-7 satisfy N16.N\le 16.Test cases 8-10 satisfy N100N\le 100 and the tree forms a "star;" at most one vertex has degree greater than two.Test cases 11-15 satisfy N100N\le 100.Test cases 16-20 satisfy no additional constraints.

Problem credits: Dhruv Rohatgi