cp's OEIS Frontend

This is a front-end for the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, made by Christian Perfect. The idea is to provide OEIS entries in non-ancient HTML, and then to think about how they're presented visually. The source code is on GitHub.

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A002620 Quarter-squares: a(n) = floor(n/2)*ceiling(n/2). Equivalently, a(n) = floor(n^2/4).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 16, 20, 25, 30, 36, 42, 49, 56, 64, 72, 81, 90, 100, 110, 121, 132, 144, 156, 169, 182, 196, 210, 225, 240, 256, 272, 289, 306, 324, 342, 361, 380, 400, 420, 441, 462, 484, 506, 529, 552, 576, 600, 625, 650, 676, 702, 729, 756, 784, 812
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Comments

b(n) = a(n+2) is the number of multigraphs with loops on 2 nodes with n edges [so g.f. for b(n) is 1/((1-x)^2*(1-x^2))]. Also number of 2-covers of an n-set; also number of 2 X n binary matrices with no zero columns up to row and column permutation. - Vladeta Jovovic, Jun 08 2000
a(n) is also the maximal number of edges that a triangle-free graph of n vertices can have. For n = 2m, the maximum is achieved by the bipartite graph K(m, m); for n = 2m + 1, the maximum is achieved by the bipartite graph K(m, m + 1). - Avi Peretz (njk(AT)netvision.net.il), Mar 18 2001
a(n) is the number of arithmetic progressions of 3 terms and any mean which can be extracted from the set of the first n natural numbers (starting from 1). - Santi Spadaro, Jul 13 2001
This is also the order dimension of the (strong) Bruhat order on the Coxeter group A_{n-1} (the symmetric group S_n). - Nathan Reading (reading(AT)math.umn.edu), Mar 07 2002
Let M_n denote the n X n matrix m(i,j) = 2 if i = j; m(i, j) = 1 if (i+j) is even; m(i, j) = 0 if i + j is odd, then a(n+2) = det M_n. - Benoit Cloitre, Jun 19 2002
Sums of pairs of neighboring terms are triangular numbers in increasing order. - Amarnath Murthy, Aug 19 2002
Also, from the starting position in standard chess, minimum number of captures by pawns of the same color to place n of them on the same file (column). Beyond a(6), the board and number of pieces available for capture are assumed to be extended enough to accomplish this task. - Rick L. Shepherd, Sep 17 2002
For example, a(2) = 1 and one capture can produce "doubled pawns", a(3) = 2 and two captures is sufficient to produce tripled pawns, etc. (Of course other, uncounted, non-capturing pawn moves are also necessary from the starting position in order to put three or more pawns on a given file.) - Rick L. Shepherd, Sep 17 2002
Terms are the geometric mean and arithmetic mean of their neighbors alternately. - Amarnath Murthy, Oct 17 2002
Maximum product of two integers whose sum is n. - Matthew Vandermast, Mar 04 2003
a(n+2) gives number of non-symmetric partitions of n into at most 3 parts, with zeros used as padding. E.g., a(7) = 12 because we can write 5 = 5 + 0 + 0 = 0 + 5 + 0 = 4 + 1 + 0 = 1 + 4 + 0 = 1 + 0 + 4 = 3 + 2 + 0 = 2 + 3 + 0 = 2 + 0 + 3 = 2 + 2 + 1 = 2 + 1 + 2 = 3 + 1 + 1 = 1 + 3 + 1. - Jon Perry, Jul 08 2003
a(n-1) gives number of distinct elements greater than 1 of non-symmetric partitions of n into at most 3 parts, with zeros used as padding, appear in the middle. E.g., 5 = 5 + 0 + 0 = 0 + 5 + 0 = 4 + 1 + 0 = 1 + 4 + 0 = 1 + 0 + 4 = 3 + 2 + 0 = 2 + 3 + 0 = 2 + 0 + 3 = 2 + 2 + 1 = 2 + 1 + 2 = 3 + 1 + 1 = 1 + 3 + 1. Of these, 050, 140, 320, 230, 221, 131 qualify and a(4) = 6. - Jon Perry, Jul 08 2003
Union of square numbers (A000290) and oblong numbers (A002378). - Lekraj Beedassy, Oct 02 2003
Conjectured size of the smallest critical set in a Latin square of order n (true for n <= 8). - Richard Bean, Jun 12 2003 and Nov 18 2003
a(n) gives number of maximal strokes on complete graph K_n, when edges on K_n can be assigned directions in any way. A "stroke" is a locally maximal directed path on a directed graph. Examples: n = 3, two strokes can exist, "x -> y -> z" and " x -> z", so a(3) = 2. n = 4, four maximal strokes exist, "u -> x -> z" and "u -> y" and "u -> z" and "x -> y -> z", so a(4) = 4. - Yasutoshi Kohmoto, Dec 20 2003
Number of symmetric Dyck paths of semilength n+1 and having three peaks. E.g., a(4) = 4 because we have U*DUUU*DDDU*D, UU*DUU*DDU*DD, UU*DDU*DUU*DD and UUU*DU*DU*DDD, where U = (1, 1), D = (1, -1) and * indicates a peak. - Emeric Deutsch, Jan 12 2004
Number of valid inequalities of the form j + k < n + 1, where j and k are positive integers, j <= k, n >= 0. - Rick L. Shepherd, Feb 27 2004
See A092186 for another application.
Also, the number of nonisomorphic transversal combinatorial geometries of rank 2. - Alexandr S. Radionov (rasmailru(AT)mail.ru), Jun 02 2004
a(n+1) is the transform of n under the Riordan array (1/(1-x^2), x). - Paul Barry, Apr 16 2005
1, 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 16, 20, 25, 30, ... specifies the largest number of copies of any of the gifts you receive on the n-th day in the "Twelve Days of Christmas" song. For example, on the fifth day of Christmas, you have 9 French hens. - Alonso del Arte, Jun 17 2005
a(n+1) is the number of noncongruent integer-sided triangles with largest side n. - David W. Wilson [Comment corrected Sep 26 2006]
A quarter-square table can be used to multiply integers since n*m = a(n+m) - a(n-m) for all integer n, m. - Michael Somos, Oct 29 2006
The sequence is the size of the smallest strong critical set in a Latin square of order n. - G.H.J. van Rees (vanrees(AT)cs.umanitoba.ca), Feb 16 2007
Maximal number of squares (maximal area) in a polyomino with perimeter 2n. - Tanya Khovanova, Jul 04 2007
For n >= 3 a(n-1) is the number of bracelets with n+3 beads, 2 of which are red, 1 of which is blue. - Washington Bomfim, Jul 26 2008
Equals row sums of triangle A122196. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 29 2008
Also a(n) is the number of different patterns of a 2-colored 3-partition of n. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Nov 19 2014
Also a(n-1) = C(((n+(n mod 2))/2), 2) + C(((n-(n mod 2))/2), 2), so this is the second diagonal of A061857 and A061866, and each even-indexed term is the average of its two neighbors. - Antti Karttunen
Equals triangle A171608 * ( 1, 2, 3, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 12 2009
a(n) gives the number of nonisomorphic faithful representations of the Symmetric group S_3 of dimension n. Any faithful representation of S_3 must contain at least one copy of the 2-dimensional irrep, along with any combination of the two 1-dimensional irreps. - Andrew Rupinski, Jan 20 2011
a(n+2) gives the number of ways to make change for "c" cents, letting n = floor(c/5) to account for the 5-repetitive nature of the task, using only pennies, nickels and dimes (see A187243). - Adam Sasson, Mar 07 2011
a(n) belongs to the sequence if and only if a(n) = floor(sqrt(a(n))) * ceiling(sqrt(a(n))), that is, a(n) = k^2 or a(n) = k*(k+1), k >= 0. - Daniel Forgues, Apr 17 2011
a(n) is the sum of the positive integers < n that have the opposite parity as n.
Deleting the first 0 from the sequence results in a sequence b = 0, 1, 2, 4, ... such that b(n) is sum of the positive integers <= n that have the same parity as n. The sequence b(n) is the additive counterpart of the double factorial. - Peter Luschny, Jul 06 2011
Third outer diagonal of Losanitsch's Triangle, A034851. - Fred Daniel Kline, Sep 10 2011
Written as a(1) = 1, a(n) = a(n-1) + ceiling (a(n-1)) this is to ceiling as A002984 is to floor, and as A033638 is to round. - Jonathan Vos Post, Oct 08 2011
a(n-2) gives the number of distinct graphs with n vertices and n regions. - Erik Hasse, Oct 18 2011
Construct the n-th row of Pascal's triangle (A007318) from the preceding row, starting with row 0 = 1. a(n) counts the total number of additions required to compute the triangle in this way up to row n, with the restrictions that copying a term does not count as an addition, and that all additions not required by the symmetry of Pascal's triangle are replaced by copying terms. - Douglas Latimer, Mar 05 2012
a(n) is the sum of the positive differences of the parts in the partitions of n+1 into exactly 2 parts. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jan 27 2013
a(n) is the maximum number of covering relations possible in an n-element graded poset. For n = 2m, this bound is achieved for the poset with two sets of m elements, with each point in the "upper" set covering each point in the "lower" set. For n = 2m+1, this bound is achieved by the poset with m nodes in an upper set covering each of m+1 nodes in a lower set. - Ben Branman, Mar 26 2013
a(n+2) is the number of (integer) partitions of n into 2 sorts of 1's and 1 sort of 2's. - Joerg Arndt, May 17 2013
Alternative statement of Oppermann's conjecture: For n>2, there is at least one prime between a(n) and a(n+1). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, May 23 2013. [This conjecture was mentioned in A220492, A222030. - Omar E. Pol, Oct 25 2013]
For any given prime number, p, there are an infinite number of a(n) divisible by p, with those a(n) occurring in evenly spaced clusters of three as a(n), a(n+1), a(n+2) for a given p. The divisibility of all a(n) by p and the result are given by the following equations, where m >= 1 is the cluster number for that p: a(2m*p)/p = p*m^2 - m; a(2m*p + 1)/p = p*m^2; a(2m*p + 2)/p = p*m^2 + m. The number of a(n) instances between clusters is 2*p - 3. - Richard R. Forberg, Jun 09 2013
Apart from the initial term this is the elliptic troublemaker sequence R_n(1,2) in the notation of Stange (see Table 1, p.16). For other elliptic troublemaker sequences R_n(a,b) see the cross references below. - Peter Bala, Aug 08 2013
a(n) is also the total number of twin hearts patterns (6c4c) packing into (n+1) X (n+1) coins, the coins left is A042948 and the voids left is A000982. See illustration in links. - Kival Ngaokrajang, Oct 24 2013
Partitions of 2n into parts of size 1, 2 or 4 where the largest part is 4, i.e., A073463(n,2). - Henry Bottomley, Oct 28 2013
a(n+1) is the minimum length of a sequence (of not necessarily distinct terms) that guarantees the existence of a (not necessarily consecutive) subsequence of length n in which like terms appear consecutively. This is also the minimum cardinality of an ordered set S that ensures that, given any partition of S, there will be a subset T of S so that the induced subpartition on T avoids the pattern ac/b, where a < b < c. - Eric Gottlieb, Mar 05 2014
Also the number of elements of the list 1..n+1 such that for any two elements {x,y} the integer (x+y)/2 lies in the range ]x,y[. - Robert G. Wilson v, May 22 2014
Number of lattice points (x,y) inside the region of the coordinate plane bounded by x <= n, 0 < y <= x/2. For a(11)=30 there are exactly 30 lattice points in the region below:
6| .
.| . |
5| .+__+
.| . | | |
4| .+__++__+
.| . | | | | |
3| .+__++__++__+
.| . | | | | | | |
2| .+__++__++__++__+
.| . | | | | | | | | |
1| .+__++__++__++__++__+
.|. | | | | | | | | | | |
0|.+__++__++__++__++__++_________
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 .. n
0 0 1 2 4 6 9 12 16 20 25 30 .. a(n) - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Oct 26 2014
a(n+1) is the greatest integer k for which there exists an n x n matrix M of nonnegative integers with every row and column summing to k, such that there do not exist n entries of M, all greater than 1, and no two of these entries in the same row or column. - Richard Stanley, Nov 19 2014
In a tiling of the triangular shape T_N with row length k for row k = 1, 2, ..., N >= 1 (or, alternatively row length N = 1-k for row k) with rectangular tiles, there can appear rectangles (i, j), N >= i >= j >= 1, of a(N+1) types (and their transposed shapes obtained by interchanging i and j). See the Feb 27 2004 comment above from Rick L. Shepherd. The motivation to look into this came from a proposal of Kival Ngaokrajang in A247139. - Wolfdieter Lang, Dec 09 2014
Every positive integer is a sum of at most four distinct quarter-squares; see A257018. - Clark Kimberling, Apr 15 2015
a(n+1) gives the maximal number of distinct elements of an n X n matrix which is symmetric (w.r.t. the main diagonal) and symmetric w.r.t. the main antidiagonal. Such matrices are called bisymmetric. See the Wikipedia link. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jul 07 2015
For 2^a(n+1), n >= 1, the number of binary bisymmetric n X n matrices, see A060656(n+1) and the comment and link by Dennis P. Walsh. - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 16 2015
a(n) is the number of partitions of 2n+1 of length three with exactly two even entries (see below example). - John M. Campbell, Jan 29 2016
a(n) is the sum of the asymmetry degrees of all 01-avoiding binary words of length n. The asymmetry degree of a finite sequence of numbers is defined to be the number of pairs of symmetrically positioned distinct entries. a(6) = 9 because the 01-avoiding binary words of length 6 are 000000, 100000, 110000, 111000, 111100, 111110, and 111111, and the sum of their asymmetry degrees is 0 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 2 + 1 + 0 = 9. Equivalently, a(n) = Sum_{k>=0} k*A275437(n,k). - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 15 2016
a(n) is the number of ways to represent all the integers in the interval [3,n+1] as the sum of two distinct natural numbers. E.g., a(7)=12 as there are 12 different ways to represent all the numbers in the interval [3,8] as the sum of two distinct parts: 1+2=3, 1+3=4, 1+4=5, 1+5=6, 1+6=7, 1+7=8, 2+3=5, 2+4=6, 2+5=7, 2+6=8, 3+4=7, 3+5=8. - Anton Zakharov, Aug 24 2016
a(n+2) is the number of conjugacy classes of involutions (considering the identity as an involution) in the hyperoctahedral group C_2 wreath S_n. - Mark Wildon, Apr 22 2017
a(n+2) is the maximum number of pieces of a pizza that can be made with n cuts that are parallel or perpendicular to each other. - Anton Zakharov, May 11 2017
Also the matching number of the n X n black bishop graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Jun 26 2017
The answer to a question posed by W. Mantel: a(n) is the maximum number of edges in an n-vertex triangle-free graph. Also solved by H. Gouwentak, J. Teixeira de Mattes, F. Schuh and W. A. Wythoff. - Charles R Greathouse IV, Feb 01 2018
Number of nonisomorphic outer planar graphs of order n >= 3, size n+2, and maximum degree 4. - Christian Barrientos and Sarah Minion, Feb 27 2018
Maximum area of a rectangle with perimeter 2n and sides of integer length. - André Engels, Jul 29 2018
Also the crossing number of the complete bipartite graph K_{3,n+1}. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 11 2018
a(n+2) is the number of distinct genotype frequency vectors possible for a sample of n diploid individuals at a biallelic genetic locus with a specified major allele. Such vectors are the lists of nonnegative genotype frequencies (n_AA, n_AB, n_BB) with n_AA + n_AB + n_BB = n and n_AA >= n_BB. - Noah A Rosenberg, Feb 05 2019
a(n+2) is the number of distinct real spectra (eigenvalues repeated according to their multiplicity) for an orthogonal n X n matrix. The case of an empty spectrum list is logically counted as one of those possibilities, when it exists. Thus a(n+2) is the number of distinct reduced forms (on the real field, in orthonormal basis) for elements in O(n). - Christian Devanz, Feb 13 2019
a(n) is the number of non-isomorphic asymmetric graphs that can be created by adding a single edge to a path on n+4 vertices. - Emma Farnsworth, Natalie Gomez, Herlandt Lino, and Darren Narayan, Jul 03 2019
a(n+1) is the number of integer triangles with largest side n. - James East, Oct 30 2019
a(n) is the number of nonempty subsets of {1,2,...,n} that contain exactly one odd and one even number. For example, for n=7, a(7)=12 and the 12 subsets are {1,2}, {1,4}, {1,6}, {2,3}, {2,5}, {2,7}, {3,4}, {3,6}, {4,5}, {4,7}, {5,6}, {6,7}. - Enrique Navarrete, Dec 16 2019
Aside from the first two terms, a(n) enumerates the number of distinct normal ordered terms in the expansion of the differential operator (x + d/dx)^m associated to the Hermite polynomials and the Heisenberg-Weyl algebra. It also enumerates the number of distinct monomials in the bivariate polynomials corresponding to the partial sums of the series for cos(x+y) and sin(x+y). Cf. A344678. - Tom Copeland, May 27 2021
a(n) is the maximal number of negative products a_i * a_j (1 <= i <= j <= n), where all a_i are real numbers. - Logan Pipes, Jul 08 2021
From Allan Bickle, Dec 20 2021: (Start)
a(n) is the maximum product of the chromatic numbers of a graph of order n-1 and its complement. The extremal graphs are characterized in the papers of Finck (1968) and Bickle (2023).
a(n) is the maximum product of the degeneracies of a graph of order n+1 and its complement. The extremal graphs are characterized in the paper of Bickle (2012). (End)
a(n) is the maximum number m such that m white rooks and m black rooks can coexist on an n-1 X n-1 chessboard without attacking each other. - Aaron Khan, Jul 13 2022
Partial sums of A004526. - Bernard Schott, Jan 06 2023
a(n) is the number of 231-avoiding odd Grassmannian permutations of size n. - Juan B. Gil, Mar 10 2023
a(n) is the number of integer tuples (x,y) satisfying n + x + y >= 0, 25*n + x - 11*y >=0, 25*n - 11*x + y >=0, n + x + y == 0 (mod 12) , 25*n + x - 11*y == 0 (mod 5), 25*n - 11*x + y == 0 (mod 5) . For n=2, the sole solution is (x,y) = (0,0) and so a(2) = 1. For n = 3, the a(3) = 2 solutions are (-3, 2) and (2, -3). - Jeffery Opoku, Feb 16 2024
Let us consider triangles whose vertices are the centers of three squares constructed on the sides of a right triangle. a(n) is the integer part of the area of these triangles, taken without repetitions and in ascending order. See the illustration in the links. - Nicolay Avilov, Aug 05 2024
For n>=2, a(n) is the indendence number of the 2-token graph F_2(P_n) of the path graph P_n on n vertices. (Alternatively, as noted by Peter Munn, F_2(P_n) is the nXn square lattice, or grid, graph diminished by a cut across the diagonal.) - Miquel A. Fiol, Oct 05 2024
For n >= 1, also the lower matching number of the n-triangular honeycomb rook graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Dec 14 2024
a(n-1) is also the minimal number of edges that a graph of n vertices must have such that any 3 vertices share at least one edge. - Ruediger Jehn, May 20 2025
a(n) is the number of edges of the antiregular graph A_n. This is the unique connected graph with n vertices and degrees 1 to n-1 (floor(n/2) repeated). - Allan Bickle, Jun 15 2025

Examples

			a(3) = 2, floor(3/2)*ceiling(3/2) = 2.
[ n] a(n)
---------
[ 2] 1
[ 3] 2
[ 4] 1 + 3
[ 5] 2 + 4
[ 6] 1 + 3 + 5
[ 7] 2 + 4 + 6
[ 8] 1 + 3 + 5 + 7
[ 9] 2 + 4 + 6 + 8
From _Wolfdieter Lang_, Dec 09 2014: (Start)
Tiling of a triangular shape T_N, N >= 1 with rectangles:
N=5, n=6: a(6) = 9 because all the rectangles (i, j) (modulo transposition, i.e., interchange of i and j) which are of use are:
  (5, 1)                ;  (1, 1)
  (4, 2), (4, 1)        ;  (2, 2), (2, 1)
                        ;  (3, 3), (3, 2), (3, 1)
That is (1+1) + (2+2) + 3 = 9 = a(6). Partial sums of 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, ... (A004526). (End)
Bisymmetric matrices B: 2 X 2, a(3) = 2 from B[1,1] and B[1,2]. 3 X 3, a(4) = 4 from B[1,1], B[1,2], B[1,3], and B[2,2]. - _Wolfdieter Lang_, Jul 07 2015
From _John M. Campbell_, Jan 29 2016: (Start)
Letting n=5, there are a(n)=a(5)=6 partitions of 2n+1=11 of length three with exactly two even entries:
(8,2,1) |- 2n+1
(7,2,2) |- 2n+1
(6,4,1) |- 2n+1
(6,3,2) |- 2n+1
(5,4,2) |- 2n+1
(4,4,3) |- 2n+1
(End)
From _Aaron Khan_, Jul 13 2022: (Start)
Examples of the sequence when used for rooks on a chessboard:
.
A solution illustrating a(5)=4:
  +---------+
  | B B . . |
  | B B . . |
  | . . W W |
  | . . W W |
  +---------+
.
A solution illustrating a(6)=6:
  +-----------+
  | B B . . . |
  | B B . . . |
  | B B . . . |
  | . . W W W |
  | . . W W W |
  +-----------+
(End)
		

References

  • Sergei Abramovich, Combinatorics of the Triangle Inequality: From Straws to Experimental Mathematics for Teachers, Spreadsheets in Education (eJSiE), Vol. 9, Issue 1, Article 1, 2016. See Fig. 3.
  • G. L. Alexanderson et al., The William Powell Putnam Mathematical Competition - Problems and Solutions: 1965-1984, M.A.A., 1985; see Problem A-1 of 27th Competition.
  • T. M. Apostol, Introduction to Analytic Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 1976, page 73, problem 25.
  • Michael Doob, The Canadian Mathematical Olympiad -- L'Olympiade Mathématique du Canada 1969-1993, Canadian Mathematical Society -- Société Mathématique du Canada, Problème 9, 1970, pp 22-23, 1993.
  • H. J. Finck, On the chromatic numbers of a graph and its complement. Theory of Graphs (Proc. Colloq., Tihany, 1966) Academic Press, New York (1968), 99-113.
  • R. L. Graham, D. E. Knuth and O. Patashnik, Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1990, p. 99.
  • D. E. Knuth, The art of programming, Vol. 1, 3rd Edition, Addison-Wesley, 1997, Ex. 36 of section 1.2.4.
  • J. Nelder, Critical sets in Latin squares, CSIRO Division of Math. and Stats. Newsletter, Vol. 38 (1977), p. 4.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

A087811 is another version of this sequence.
Differences of A002623. Complement of A049068.
a(n) = A014616(n-2) + 2 = A033638(n) - 1 = A078126(n) + 1. Cf. A055802, A055803.
Antidiagonal sums of array A003983.
Cf. A033436 - A033444. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 30 2009
Elliptic troublemaker sequences: A000212 (= R_n(1,3) = R_n(2,3)), A007590 (= R_n(2,4)), A030511 (= R_n(2,6) = R_n(4,6)), A033436 (= R_n(1,4) = R_n(3,4)), A033437 (= R_n(1,5) = R_n(4,5)), A033438 (= R_n(1,6) = R_n(5,6)), A033439 (= R_n(1,7) = R_n(6,7)), A184535 (= R_n(2,5) = R_n(3,5)).
Cf. A077043, A060656 (2^a(n)), A344678.
Cf. A250000 (queens on a chessboard), A176222 (kings on a chessboard), A355509 (knights on a chessboard).
Maximal product of k positive integers with sum n, for k = 2..10: this sequence (k=2), A006501 (k=3), A008233 (k=4), A008382 (k=5), A008881 (k=6), A009641 (k=7), A009694 (k=8), A009714 (k=9), A354600 (k=10).

Programs

  • GAP
    # using the formula by Paul Barry
    A002620 := List([1..10^4], n-> (2*n^2 - 1 + (-1)^n)/8); # Muniru A Asiru, Feb 01 2018
    
  • Haskell
    a002620 = (`div` 4) . (^ 2) -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 24 2012
    
  • Magma
    [ Floor(n/2)*Ceiling(n/2) : n in [0..40]];
    
  • Maple
    A002620 := n->floor(n^2/4); G002620 := series(x^2/((1-x)^2*(1-x^2)),x,60);
    with(combstruct):ZL:=[st,{st=Prod(left,right),left=Set(U,card=r),right=Set(U,card=1)}, unlabeled]: subs(r=1,stack): seq(count(subs(r=2,ZL),size=m),m=0..57) ; # Zerinvary Lajos, Mar 09 2007
  • Mathematica
    Table[Ceiling[n/2] Floor[n/2], {n, 0, 56}] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jun 18 2005 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{2, 0, -2, 1}, {0, 0, 1, 2}, 60] (* Harvey P. Dale, Oct 05 2012 *)
    Table[Floor[n^2/4], {n, 0, 20}] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 11 2018 *)
    Floor[Range[0, 20]^2/4] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 11 2018 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[-(x^2/((-1 + x)^3 (1 + x))), {x, 0, 20}], x] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 11 2018 *)
    Table[Floor[n^2/2]/2, {n, 0, 56}] (* Clark Kimberling, Dec 05 2021 *)
  • Maxima
    makelist(floor(n^2/4),n,0,50); /* Martin Ettl, Oct 17 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=n^2\4
    
  • PARI
    (t(n)=n*(n+1)/2);for(i=1,50,print1(",",(-1)^i*sum(k=1,i,(-1)^k*t(k))))
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=n^2>>2 \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Nov 11 2009
    
  • PARI
    x='x+O('x^100); concat([0, 0], Vec(x^2/((1-x)^2*(1-x^2)))) \\ Altug Alkan, Oct 15 2015
    
  • Python
    def A002620(n): return (n**2)>>2 # Chai Wah Wu, Jul 07 2022
  • Sage
    def A002620():
         x, y = 0, 1
         yield x
         while true:
             yield x
             x, y = x + y, x//y + 1
    a = A002620(); print([next(a) for i in range(58)]) # Peter Luschny, Dec 17 2015
    

Formula

a(n) = (2*n^2-1+(-1)^n)/8. - Paul Barry, May 27 2003
G.f.: x^2/((1-x)^2*(1-x^2)) = x^2 / ( (1+x)*(1-x)^3 ). - Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation, leading zeros dropped
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(2*x^2+2*x-1)/8 + exp(-x)/8.
a(n) = 2*a(n-1) - 2*a(n-3) + a(n-4). - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Dec 05 2008
a(-n) = a(n) for all n in Z.
a(n) = a(n-1) + floor(n/2), n > 0. Partial sums of A004526. - Adam Kertesz, Sep 20 2000
a(n) = a(n-1) + a(n-2) - a(n-3) + 1 [with a(-1) = a(0) = a(1) = 0], a(2k) = k^2, a(2k-1) = k(k-1). - Henry Bottomley, Mar 08 2000
0*0, 0*1, 1*1, 1*2, 2*2, 2*3, 3*3, 3*4, ... with an obvious pattern.
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} floor(k/2). - Yong Kong (ykong(AT)curagen.com), Mar 10 2001
a(n) = n*floor((n-1)/2) - floor((n-1)/2)*(floor((n-1)/2)+ 1); a(n) = a(n-2) + n-2 with a(1) = 0, a(2) = 0. - Santi Spadaro, Jul 13 2001
Also: a(n) = binomial(n, 2) - a(n-1) = A000217(n-1) - a(n-1) with a(0) = 0. - Labos Elemer, Apr 26 2003
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^(n-k)*C(k, 2). - Paul Barry, Jul 01 2003
a(n) = (-1)^n * partial sum of alternating triangular numbers. - Jon Perry, Dec 30 2003
a(n) = A024206(n+1) - n. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 27 2004
a(n) = a(n-2) + n - 1, n > 1. - Paul Barry, Jul 14 2004
a(n+1) = Sum_{i=0..n} min(i, n-i). - Marc LeBrun, Feb 15 2005
a(n+1) = Sum_{k = 0..floor((n-1)/2)} n-2k; a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} k*(1-(-1)^(n+k-1))/2. - Paul Barry, Apr 16 2005
a(n) = A108561(n+1,n-2) for n > 2. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jun 10 2005
1 + 1/(1 + 2/(1 + 4/(1 + 6/(1 + 9/(1 + 12/(1 + 16/(1 + ...))))))) = 6/(Pi^2 - 6) = 1.550546096730... - Philippe Deléham, Jun 20 2005
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} Min_{k, n-k}, sums of rows of the triangle in A004197. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 27 2005
For n > 2 a(n) = a(n-1) + ceiling(sqrt(a(n-1))). - Jonathan Vos Post, Jan 19 2006
Sequence starting (2, 2, 4, 6, 9, ...) = A128174 (as an infinite lower triangular matrix) * vector [1, 2, 3, ...]; where A128174 = (1; 0,1; 1,0,1; 0,1,0,1; ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 27 2007
a(n) = Sum_{i=k..n} P(i, k) where P(i, k) is the number of partitions of i into k parts. - Thomas Wieder, Sep 01 2007
a(n) = sum of row (n-2) of triangle A115514. - Gary W. Adamson, Oct 25 2007
For n > 1: gcd(a(n+1), a(n)) = a(n+1) - a(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 06 2008
a(n+3) = a(n) + A000027(n) + A008619(n+1) = a(n) + A001651(n+1) with a(1) = 0, a(2) = 0, a(3) = 1. - Yosu Yurramendi, Aug 10 2008
a(2n) = A000290(n). a(2n+1) = A002378(n). - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 29 2008
a(n+1) = a(n) + A110654(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 06 2009
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} (k mod 2)*(n-k); Cf. A000035, A001477. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 05 2009
a(n-1) = (n*n - 2*n + n mod 2)/4. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Nov 23 2009
a(n) = round((2*n^2-1)/8) = round(n^2/4) = ceiling((n^2-1)/4). - Mircea Merca, Nov 29 2010
n*a(n+2) = 2*a(n+1) + (n+2)*a(n). Holonomic Ansatz with smallest order of recurrence. - Thotsaporn Thanatipanonda, Dec 12 2010
a(n+1) = (n*(2+n) + n mod 2)/4. - Fred Daniel Kline, Sep 11 2011
a(n) = A199332(n, floor((n+1)/2)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 23 2011
a(n) = floor(b(n)) with b(n) = b(n-1) + n/(1+e^(1/n)) and b(0)= 0. - Richard R. Forberg, Jun 08 2013
a(n) = Sum_{i=1..floor((n+1)/2)} (n+1)-2i. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 09 2013
a(n) = floor((n+2)/2 - 1)*(floor((n+2)/2)-1 + (n+2) mod 2). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 09 2013
Sum_{n>=2} 1/a(n) = 1 + zeta(2) = 1+A013661. - Enrique Pérez Herrero, Jun 30 2013
Empirical: a(n-1) = floor(n/(e^(4/n)-1)). - Richard R. Forberg, Jul 24 2013
a(n) = A007590(n)/2. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Mar 08 2014
A237347(a(n)) = 3; A235711(n) = A003415(a(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 18 2014
A240025(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 05 2014
0 = a(n)*a(n+2) + a(n+1)*(-2*a(n+2) + a(n+3)) for all integers n. - Michael Somos, Nov 22 2014
a(n) = Sum_{j=1..n} Sum_{i=1..n} ceiling((i+j-n-1)/2). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Mar 12 2015
a(4n+1) = A002943(n) for all n>=0. - M. F. Hasler, Oct 11 2015
a(n+2)-a(n-2) = A004275(n+1). - Anton Zakharov, May 11 2017
a(n) = floor(n/2)*floor((n+1)/2). - Bruno Berselli, Jun 08 2017
a(n) = a(n-3) + floor(3*n/2) - 2. - Yuchun Ji, Aug 14 2020
a(n)+a(n+1) = A000217(n). - R. J. Mathar, Mar 13 2021
a(n) = A004247(n,floor(n/2)). - Logan Pipes, Jul 08 2021
a(n) = floor(n^2/2)/2. - Clark Kimberling, Dec 05 2021
Sum_{n>=2} (-1)^n/a(n) = Pi^2/6 - 1. - Amiram Eldar, Mar 10 2022

A001541 a(0) = 1, a(1) = 3; for n > 1, a(n) = 6*a(n-1) - a(n-2).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 17, 99, 577, 3363, 19601, 114243, 665857, 3880899, 22619537, 131836323, 768398401, 4478554083, 26102926097, 152139002499, 886731088897, 5168247530883, 30122754096401, 175568277047523, 1023286908188737, 5964153172084899, 34761632124320657
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Chebyshev polynomials of the first kind evaluated at 3.
This sequence gives the values of x in solutions of the Diophantine equation x^2 - 8*y^2 = 1, the corresponding values of y are in A001109. For n > 0, the ratios a(n)/A001090(n) may be obtained as convergents to sqrt(8): either successive convergents of [3; -6] or odd convergents of [2; 1, 4]. - Lekraj Beedassy, Sep 09 2003 [edited by Jon E. Schoenfield, May 04 2014]
Also gives solutions to the equation x^2 - 1 = floor(x*r*floor(x/r)) where r = sqrt(8). - Benoit Cloitre, Feb 14 2004
Appears to give all solutions greater than 1 to the equation: x^2 = ceiling(x*r*floor(x/r)) where r = sqrt(2). - Benoit Cloitre, Feb 24 2004
This sequence give numbers n such that (n-1)*(n+1)/2 is a perfect square. Remark: (i-1)*(i+1)/2 = (i^2-1)/2 = -1 = i^2 with i = sqrt(-1) so i is also in the sequence. - Pierre CAMI, Apr 20 2005
a(n) is prime for n = {1, 2, 4, 8}. Prime a(n) are {3, 17, 577, 665857}, which belong to A001601(n). a(2k-1) is divisible by a(1) = 3. a(4k-2) is divisible by a(2) = 17. a(8k-4) is divisible by a(4) = 577. a(16k-8) is divisible by a(8) = 665857. - Alexander Adamchuk, Nov 24 2006
The upper principal convergents to 2^(1/2), beginning with 3/2, 17/12, 99/70, 577/408, comprise a strictly decreasing sequence; essentially, numerators=A001541 and denominators=A001542. - Clark Kimberling, Aug 26 2008
Also index of sequence A082532 for which A082532(n) = 1. - Carmine Suriano, Sep 07 2010
Numbers n such that sigma(n-1) and sigma(n+1) are both odd numbers. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Mar 28 2011
Also, numbers such that floor(a(n)^2/2) is a square: base 2 analog of A031149, A204502, A204514, A204516, A204518, A204520, A004275, A001075. - M. F. Hasler, Jan 15 2012
Numbers such that 2n^2 - 2 is a square. Also integer square roots of the expression 2*n^2 + 1, at values of n given by A001542. Also see A228405 regarding 2n^2 -+ 2^k generally for k >= 0. - Richard R. Forberg, Aug 20 2013
Values of x (or y) in the solutions to x^2 - 6xy + y^2 + 8 = 0. - Colin Barker, Feb 04 2014
Panda and Ray call the numbers in this sequence the Lucas-balancing numbers C_n (see references and links).
Partial sums of X or X+1 of Pythagorean triples (X,X+1,Z). - Peter M. Chema, Feb 03 2017
a(n)/A001542(n) is the closest rational approximation to sqrt(2) with a numerator not larger than a(n), and 2*A001542(n)/a(n) is the closest rational approximation to sqrt(2) with a denominator not larger than a(n). These rational approximations together with those obtained from the sequences A001653 and A002315 give a complete set of closest rational approximations to sqrt(2) with restricted numerator or denominator. a(n)/A001542(n) > sqrt(2) > 2*A001542(n)/a(n). - A.H.M. Smeets, May 28 2017
x = a(n), y = A001542(n) are solutions of the Diophantine equation x^2 - 2y^2 = 1 (Pell equation). x = 2*A001542(n), y = a(n) are solutions of the Diophantine equation x^2 - 2y^2 = -2. Both together give the set of fractional approximations for sqrt(2) obtained from limited fractions obtained from continued fraction representation to sqrt(2). - A.H.M. Smeets, Jun 22 2017
a(n) is the radius of the n-th circle among the sequence of circles generated as follows: Starting with a unit circle centered at the origin, every subsequent circle touches the previous circle as well as the two limbs of hyperbola x^2 - y^2 = 1, and lies in the region y > 0. - Kaushal Agrawal, Nov 10 2018
All of the positive integer solutions of a*b+1=x^2, a*c+1=y^2, b*c+1=z^2, x+z=2*y, 0A001542(n), b=A005319(n), c=A001542(n+1), x=A001541(n), y=A001653(n+1), z=A002315(n) with 0Michael Somos, Jun 26 2022

Examples

			99^2 + 99^2 = 140^2 + 2. - _Carmine Suriano_, Jan 05 2015
G.f. = 1 + 3*x + 17*x^2 + 99*x^3 + 577*x^4 + 3363*x^5 + 19601*x^6 + 114243*x^7 + ...
		

References

  • Julio R. Bastida, Quadratic properties of a linearly recurrent sequence. Proceedings of the Tenth Southeastern Conference on Combinatorics, Graph Theory and Computing (Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton, Fla., 1979), pp. 163--166, Congress. Numer., XXIII-XXIV, Utilitas Math., Winnipeg, Man., 1979. MR0561042 (81e:10009)
  • J. W. L. Glaisher, On Eulerian numbers (formulas, residues, end-figures), with the values of the first twenty-seven, Quarterly Journal of Mathematics, vol. 45, 1914, pp. 1-51.
  • G. K. Panda, Some fascinating properties of balancing numbers, In Proc. of Eleventh Internat. Conference on Fibonacci Numbers and Their Applications, Cong. Numerantium 194 (2009), 185-189.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pages 257-258.
  • P.-F. Teilhet, Query 2376, L'Intermédiaire des Mathématiciens, 11 (1904), 138-139. - N. J. A. Sloane, Mar 08 2022

Crossrefs

Bisection of A001333. A003499(n) = 2a(n).
Cf. A055997 = numbers n such that n(n-1)/2 is a square.
Row 1 of array A188645.
Cf. A055792 (terms squared), A132592.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a001541 n = a001541_list !! (n-1)
    a001541_list =
    1 : 3 : zipWith (-) (map (* 6) $ tail a001541_list) a001541_list
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 06 2011
    (Scheme, with memoization-macro definec)
    (definec (A001541 n) (cond ((zero? n) 1) ((= 1 n) 3) (else (- (* 6 (A001541 (- n 1))) (A001541 (- n 2))))))
    ;; Antti Karttunen, Oct 04 2016
  • Magma
    [n: n in [1..10000000] |IsSquare(8*(n^2-1))]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 18 2010
    
  • Maple
    a[0]:=1: a[1]:=3: for n from 2 to 26 do a[n]:=6*a[n-1]-a[n-2] od: seq(a[n], n=0..20); # Zerinvary Lajos, Jul 26 2006
    A001541:=-(-1+3*z)/(1-6*z+z**2); # Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
  • Mathematica
    Table[Simplify[(1/2) (3 + 2 Sqrt[2])^n + (1/2) (3 - 2 Sqrt[2])^n], {n, 0, 20}] (* Artur Jasinski, Feb 10 2010 *)
    a[ n_] := If[n == 0, 1, With[{m = Abs @ n}, m Sum[4^i Binomial[m + i, 2 i]/(m + i), {i, 0, m}]]]; (* Michael Somos, Jul 11 2011 *)
    a[ n_] := ChebyshevT[ n, 3]; (* Michael Somos, Jul 11 2011 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{6, -1}, {1, 3}, 50] (* Vladimir Joseph Stephan Orlovsky, Feb 12 2012 *)
  • PARI
    {a(n) = real((3 + quadgen(32))^n)}; /* Michael Somos, Apr 07 2003 */
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = subst( poltchebi( abs(n)), x, 3)}; /* Michael Somos, Apr 07 2003 */
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = if( n<0, a(-n), polsym(1 - 6*x + x^2, n) [n+1] / 2)}; /* Michael Somos, Apr 07 2003 */
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = polchebyshev( n, 1, 3)}; /* Michael Somos, Jul 11 2011 */
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=([1,2,2;2,1,2;2,2,3]^n)[3,3] \\ Vim Wenders, Mar 28 2007
    

Formula

G.f.: (1-3*x)/(1-6*x+x^2). - Barry E. Williams and Wolfdieter Lang, May 05 2000
E.g.f.: exp(3*x)*cosh(2*sqrt(2)*x). Binomial transform of A084128. - Paul Barry, May 16 2003
From N. J. A. Sloane, May 16 2003: (Start)
a(n) = sqrt(8*((A001109(n))^2) + 1).
a(n) = T(n, 3), with Chebyshev's T-polynomials A053120. (End)
a(n) = ((3+2*sqrt(2))^n + (3-2*sqrt(2))^n)/2.
a(n) = cosh(2*n*arcsinh(1)). - Herbert Kociemba, Apr 24 2008
a(n) ~ (1/2)*(sqrt(2) + 1)^(2*n). - Joe Keane (jgk(AT)jgk.org), May 15 2002
For all elements x of the sequence, 2*x^2 - 2 is a square. Limit_{n -> infinity} a(n)/a(n-1) = 3 + 2*sqrt(2). - Gregory V. Richardson, Oct 10 2002 [corrected by Peter Pein, Mar 09 2009]
a(n) = 3*A001109(n) - A001109(n-1), n >= 1. - Barry E. Williams and Wolfdieter Lang, May 05 2000
For n >= 1, a(n) = A001652(n) - A001652(n-1). - Charlie Marion, Jul 01 2003
From Paul Barry, Sep 18 2003: (Start)
a(n) = ((-1+sqrt(2))^n + (1+sqrt(2))^n + (1-sqrt(2))^n + (-1-sqrt(2))^n)/4 (with interpolated zeros).
E.g.f.: cosh(x)*cosh(sqrt(2)x) (with interpolated zeros). (End)
For n > 0, a(n)^2 + 1 = 2*A001653(n-1)*A001653(n). - Charlie Marion, Dec 21 2003
a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = 2*(A001653(2*n+1) - A001652(2*n)). - Charlie Marion, Mar 17 2003
a(n) = Sum_{k >= 0} binomial(2*n, 2*k)*2^k = Sum_{k >= 0} A086645(n, k)*2^k. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 29 2004
a(n)*A002315(n+k) = A001652(2*n+k) + A001652(k) + 1; for k > 0, a(n+k)*A002315(n) = A001652(2*n+k) - A001652(k-1). - Charlie Marion, Mar 17 2003
For n > k, a(n)*A001653(k) = A011900(n+k) + A053141(n-k-1). For n <= k, a(n)*A001653(k) = A011900(n+k) + A053141(k-n). - Charlie Marion, Oct 18 2004
A053141(n+1) + A055997(n+1) = a(n+1) + A001109(n+1). - Creighton Dement, Sep 16 2004
a(n+1) - A001542(n+1) = A090390(n+1) - A046729(n) = A001653(n); a(n+1) - 4*A079291(n+1) = (-1)^(n+1). Formula generated by the floretion - .5'i + .5'j - .5i' + .5j' - 'ii' + 'jj' - 2'kk' + 'ij' + .5'ik' + 'ji' + .5'jk' + .5'ki' + .5'kj' + e. - Creighton Dement, Nov 16 2004
a(n) = sqrt( A055997(2*n) ). - Alexander Adamchuk, Nov 24 2006
a(2n) = A056771(n). a(2*n+1) = 3*A077420(n). - Alexander Adamchuk, Feb 01 2007
a(n) = (A000129(n)^2)*4 + (-1)^n. - Vim Wenders, Mar 28 2007
2*a(k)*A001653(n)*A001653(n+k) = A001653(n)^2 + A001653(n+k)^2 + A001542(k)^2. - Charlie Marion, Oct 12 2007
a(n) = A001333(2*n). - Ctibor O. Zizka, Aug 13 2008
A028982(a(n)-1) + 2 = A028982(a(n)+1). - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Mar 28 2011
a(n) = 2*A001108(n) + 1. - Paul Weisenhorn, Dec 17 2011
a(n) = sqrt(2*x^2 + 1) with x being A001542(n). - Zak Seidov, Jan 30 2013
a(2n) = 2*a(n)^2 - 1 = a(n)^2 + 2*A001542(n)^2. a(2*n+1) = 1 + 2*A002315(n)^2. - Steven J. Haker, Dec 04 2013
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) + 4*A001542(n-1); e.g., a(4) = 99 = 3*17 + 4*12. - Zak Seidov, Dec 19 2013
a(n) = cos(n * arccos(3)) = cosh(n * log(3 + 2*sqrt(2))). - Daniel Suteu, Jul 28 2016
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jul 28 2016: (Start)
Inverse binomial transform of A084130.
Exponential convolution of A000079 and A084058.
Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n*a(n)/n! = cosh(2*sqrt(2))/exp(3) = 0.4226407909842764637... (End)
a(2*n+1) = 2*a(n)*a(n+1) - 3. - Timothy L. Tiffin, Oct 12 2016
a(n) = a(-n) for all n in Z. - Michael Somos, Jan 20 2017
a(2^n) = A001601(n+1). - A.H.M. Smeets, May 28 2017
a(A298210(n)) = A002350(2*n^2). - A.H.M. Smeets, Jan 25 2018
a(n) = S(n, 6) - 3*S(n-1, 6), for n >= 0, with S(n, 6) = A001109(n+1), (Chebyshev S of A049310). See the first comment and the formula a(n) = T(n, 3). - Wolfdieter Lang, Nov 22 2020
From Peter Bala, Dec 31 2021: (Start)
a(n) = [x^n] (3*x + sqrt(1 + 8*x^2))^n.
The Gauss congruences a(n*p^k) == a(n*p^(k-1)) hold for all prime p and positive integers n and k.
O.g.f. A(x) = 1 + x*d/dx(log(B(x))), where B(x) = 1/sqrt(1 - 6*x + x^2) is the o.g.f. of A001850. (End)
From Peter Bala, Aug 17 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n >= 1} 1/(a(n) - 2/a(n)) = 1/2.
Sum_{n >= 1} (-1)^(n+1)/(a(n) + 1/a(n)) = 1/4.
Sum_{n >= 1} 1/(a(n)^2 - 2) = 1/2 - 1/sqrt(8). (End)
From Peter Bala, Jun 23 2025: (Start)
Product_{n >= 0} (1 + 1/a(2^n)) = sqrt(2).
Product_{n >= 0} (1 - 1/(2*a(2^n))) = (4/7)*sqrt(2). See A002812. (End)

A001075 a(0) = 1, a(1) = 2, a(n) = 4*a(n-1) - a(n-2).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 7, 26, 97, 362, 1351, 5042, 18817, 70226, 262087, 978122, 3650401, 13623482, 50843527, 189750626, 708158977, 2642885282, 9863382151, 36810643322, 137379191137, 512706121226, 1913445293767, 7141075053842, 26650854921601, 99462344632562, 371198523608647
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Chebyshev's T(n,x) polynomials evaluated at x=2.
x = 2^n - 1 is prime if and only if x divides a(2^(n-2)).
Any k in the sequence is succeeded by 2*k + sqrt{3*(k^2 - 1)}. - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 28 2002
For all elements x of the sequence, 12*x^2 - 12 is a square. Lim_{n -> infinity} a(n)/a(n-1) = 2 + sqrt(3) = (4 + sqrt(12))/2 which preserves the kinship with the equation "12*x^2 - 12 is a square" where the initial "12" ends up appearing as a square root. - Gregory V. Richardson, Oct 10 2002
This sequence gives the values of x in solutions of the Diophantine equation x^2 - 3*y^2 = 1; the corresponding values of y are in A001353. The solution ratios a(n)/A001353(n) are obtained as convergents of the continued fraction expansion of sqrt(3): either as successive convergents of [2;-4] or as odd convergents of [1;1,2]. - Lekraj Beedassy, Sep 19 2003 [edited by Jon E. Schoenfield, May 04 2014]
a(n) is half the central value in a list of three consecutive integers, the lengths of the sides of a triangle with integer sides and area. - Eugene McDonnell (eemcd(AT)mac.com), Oct 19 2003
a(3+6*k) - 1 and a(3+6*k) + 1 are consecutive odd powerful numbers. See A076445. - T. D. Noe, May 04 2006
The intermediate convergents to 3^(1/2), beginning with 3/2, 12/7, 45/26, 168/97, comprise a strictly increasing sequence; essentially, numerators=A005320, denominators=A001075. - Clark Kimberling, Aug 27 2008
The upper principal convergents to 3^(1/2), beginning with 2/1, 7/4, 26/15, 97/56, comprise a strictly decreasing sequence; numerators=A001075, denominators=A001353. - Clark Kimberling, Aug 27 2008
a(n+1) is the Hankel transform of A000108(n) + A000984(n) = (n+2)*Catalan(n). - Paul Barry, Aug 11 2009
Also, numbers such that floor(a(n)^2/3) is a square: base 3 analog of A031149, A204502, A204514, A204516, A204518, A204520, A004275, A001541. - M. F. Hasler, Jan 15 2012
Pisano period lengths: 1, 2, 2, 4, 3, 2, 8, 4, 6, 6, 10, 4, 12, 8, 6, 8, 18, 6, 5, 12, ... - R. J. Mathar, Aug 10 2012
Except for the first term, positive values of x (or y) satisfying x^2 - 4*x*y + y^2 + 3 = 0. - Colin Barker, Feb 04 2014
Except for the first term, positive values of x (or y) satisfying x^2 - 14*x*y + y^2 + 48 = 0. - Colin Barker, Feb 10 2014
A triangle with row sums generating the sequence can be constructed by taking the production matrix M. Take powers of M, extracting the top rows.
M =
1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...
2, 0, 3, 0, 0, 0, ...
2, 0, 0, 3, 0, 0, ...
2, 0, 0, 0, 3, 0, ...
2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3, ...
...
The triangle generated from M is:
1,
1, 1,
3, 1, 3,
11, 3, 3, 9,
41, 11, 9, 9, 27,
...
The left border is A001835 and row sums are (1, 2, 7, 26, 97, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 25 2016
Even-indexed terms are odd while odd-indexed terms are even. Indeed, a(2*n) = 2*(a(n))^2 - 1 and a(2*n+1) = 2*a(n)*a(n+1) - 2. - Timothy L. Tiffin, Oct 11 2016
For each n, a(0) divides a(n), a(1) divides a(2n+1), a(2) divides a(4*n+2), a(3) divides a(6*n+3), a(4) divides a(8*n+4), a(5) divides a(10n+5), and so on. Thus, a(k) divides a((2*n+1)*k) for each k > 0 and n >= 0. A proof of this can be found in Bhargava-Kedlaya-Ng's first solution to Problem A2 of the 76th Putnam Mathematical Competition. Links to the exam and its solutions can be found below. - Timothy L. Tiffin, Oct 12 2016
From Timothy L. Tiffin, Oct 21 2016: (Start)
If any term a(n) is a prime number, then its index n will be a power of 2. This is a consequence of the results given in the previous two comments. See A277434 for those prime terms.
a(2n) == 1 (mod 6) and a(2*n+1) == 2 (mod 6). Consequently, each odd prime factor of a(n) will be congruent to 1 modulo 6 and, thus, found in A002476.
a(n) == 1 (mod 10) if n == 0 (mod 6), a(n) == 2 (mod 10) if n == {1,-1} (mod 6), a(n) == 7 (mod 10) if n == {2,-2} (mod 6), and a(n) == 6 (mod 10) if n == 3 (mod 6). So, the rightmost digits of a(n) form a repeating cycle of length 6: 1, 2, 7, 6, 7, 2. (End)
a(A298211(n)) = A002350(3*n^2). - A.H.M. Smeets, Jan 25 2018
(2 + sqrt(3))^n = a(n) + A001353(n)*sqrt(3), n >= 0; integers in the quadratic number field Q(sqrt(3)). - Wolfdieter Lang, Feb 16 2018
Yong Hao Ng has shown that for any n, a(n) is coprime with any member of A001834 and with any member of A001835. - René Gy, Feb 26 2018
Positive numbers k such that 3*(k-1)*(k+1) is a square. - Davide Rotondo, Oct 25 2020
a(n)*a(n+1)-1 = a(2*n+1)/2 = A001570(n) divides both a(n)^6+1 and a(n+1)^6+1. In other words, for k = a(2*n+1)/2, (k+1)^6 has divisors congruent to -1 modulo k (cf. A350916). - Max Alekseyev, Jan 23 2022

Examples

			2^6 - 1 = 63 does not divide a(2^4) = 708158977, therefore 63 is composite. 2^5 - 1 = 31 divides a(2^3) = 18817, therefore 31 is prime.
G.f. = 1 + 2*x + 7*x^2 + 26*x^3 + 97*x^4 + 362*x^5 + 1351*x^6 + 5042*x^7 + ...
		

References

  • Serge Lang, Introduction to Diophantine Approximations, Addison-Wesley, New York, 1966.
  • Eugene McDonnell, "Heron's Rule and Integer-Area Triangles", Vector 12.3 (January 1996) pp. 133-142.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
  • P.-F. Teilhet, Reply to Query 2094, L'Intermédiaire des Mathématiciens, 10 (1903), 235-238.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Haskell
    a001075 n = a001075_list !! n
    a001075_list =
       1 : 2 : zipWith (-) (map (4 *) $ tail a001075_list) a001075_list
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 11 2011
    
  • Magma
    I:=[1, 2]; [n le 2 select I[n] else 4*Self(n-1) - Self(n-2): n in [1..30]]; // G. C. Greubel, Dec 19 2017
  • Maple
    A001075 := proc(n)
        orthopoly[T](n,2) ;
    end proc:
    seq(A001075(n),n=0..30) ; # R. J. Mathar, Apr 14 2018
  • Mathematica
    Table[ Ceiling[(1/2)*(2 + Sqrt[3])^n], {n, 0, 24}]
    CoefficientList[Series[(1-2*x) / (1-4*x+x^2), {x, 0, 24}], x] (* Jean-François Alcover, Dec 21 2011, after Simon Plouffe *)
    LinearRecurrence[{4,-1},{1,2},30] (* Harvey P. Dale, Aug 22 2015 *)
    Round@Table[LucasL[2n, Sqrt[2]]/2, {n, 0, 20}] (* Vladimir Reshetnikov, Sep 15 2016 *)
    ChebyshevT[Range[0, 20], 2] (* Eric W. Weisstein, May 26 2017 *)
    a[ n_] := LucasL[2*n, x]/2 /. x->Sqrt[2]; (* Michael Somos, Sep 05 2022 *)
  • PARI
    {a(n) = subst(poltchebi(abs(n)), x, 2)};
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = real((2 + quadgen(12))^abs(n))};
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = polsym(1 - 4*x + x^2, abs(n))[1 + abs(n)]/2};
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=polchebyshev(n,1,2) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Nov 07 2016
    
  • PARI
    my(x='x+O('x^30)); Vec((1-2*x)/(1-4*x+x^2)) \\ G. C. Greubel, Dec 19 2017
    
  • SageMath
    [lucas_number2(n,4,1)/2 for n in range(0, 25)] # Zerinvary Lajos, May 14 2009
    
  • SageMath
    def a(n):
        Q = QuadraticField(3, 't')
        u = Q.units()[0]
        return (u^n).lift().coeffs()[0]  # Ralf Stephan, Jun 19 2014
    

Formula

G.f.: (1 - 2*x)/(1 - 4*x + x^2). - Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
E.g.f.: exp(2*x)*cosh(sqrt(3)*x).
a(n) = 4*a(n-1) - a(n-2) = a(-n).
a(n) = (S(n, 4) - S(n-2, 4))/2 = T(n, 2), with S(n, x) := U(n, x/2), S(-1, x) := 0, S(-2, x) := -1. U, resp. T, are Chebyshev's polynomials of the second, resp. first, kind. S(n-1, 4) = A001353(n), n >= 0. See A049310 and A053120.
a(n) = A001353(n+2) - 2*A001353(n+1).
a(n) = sqrt(1 + 3*A001353(n)) (cf. Richardson comment, Oct 10 2002).
a(n) = 2^(-n)*Sum_{k>=0} binomial(2*n, 2*k)*3^k = 2^(-n)*Sum_{k>=0} A086645(n, k)*3^k. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 01 2004
a(n) = ((2 + sqrt(3))^n + (2 - sqrt(3))^n)/2; a(n) = ceiling((1/2)*(2 + sqrt(3))^(n)).
a(n) = cosh(n * log(2 + sqrt(3))).
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} binomial(n, 2*k)*2^(n-2*k)*3^k. - Paul Barry, May 08 2003
a(n+2) = 2*a(n+1) + 3*Sum_{k>=0} a(n-k)*2^k. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 03 2004
a(n) = 2*a(n-1) + 3*A001353(n-1). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jul 21 2006
a(n) = left term of M^n * [1,0] where M = the 2 X 2 matrix [2,3; 1,2]. Right term = A001353(n). Example: a(4) = 97 since M^4 * [1,0] = [A001075(4), A001353(4)] = [97, 56]. - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 27 2006
Binomial transform of A026150: (1, 1, 4, 10, 28, 76, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 23 2007
First differences of A001571. - N. J. A. Sloane, Nov 03 2009
Sequence satisfies -3 = f(a(n), a(n+1)) where f(u, v) = u^2 + v^2 - 4*u*v. - Michael Somos, Sep 19 2008
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} A201730(n,k)*2^k. - Philippe Deléham, Dec 06 2011
G.f.: G(0)/2, where G(k) = 1 + 1/(1 - x*(3*k - 4)/(x*(3*k - 1) - 2/G(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, May 28 2013
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} A238731(n,k). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 05 2014
a(n) = (-1)^n*(A125905(n) + 2*A125905(n-1)), n > 0. - Franck Maminirina Ramaharo, Nov 11 2018
a(n) = (tan(Pi/12)^n + tan(5*Pi/12)^n)/2. - Greg Dresden, Oct 01 2020
From Peter Bala, Aug 17 2022: (Start)
a(n) = (1/2)^n * [x^n] ( 4*x + sqrt(1 + 12*x^2) )^n.
The g.f. A(x) satisfies A(2*x) = 1 + x*B'(x)/B(x), where B(x) = 1/sqrt(1 - 8*x + 4*x^2) is the g.f. of A069835.
The Gauss congruences a(n*p^k) == a(n*p^(k-1)) (mod p^k) hold for all primes p >= 3 and positive integers n and k.
Sum_{n >= 1} 1/(a(n) - (3/2)/a(n)) = 1.
Sum_{n >= 1} (-1)^(n+1)/(a(n) + (1/2)/a(n)) = 1/3.
Sum_{n >= 1} 1/(a(n)^2 - 3/2) = 1 - 1/sqrt(3). (End)
a(n) = binomial(2*n, n) + 2*Sum_{k > 0} binomial(2*n, n+2*k)*cos(k*Pi/3). - Greg Dresden, Oct 11 2022
2*a(n) + 2^n = 3*Sum_{k=-n..n} (-1)^k*binomial(2*n, n+6*k). - Greg Dresden, Feb 07 2023

Extensions

More terms from James Sellers, Jul 10 2000
Chebyshev comments from Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 31 2002

A004277 1 together with positive even numbers.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94, 96, 98, 100, 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, 112, 114, 116, 118, 120, 122, 124, 126, 128, 130, 132
Offset: 0

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Comments

Also number of non-attacking bishops on n X n board. - Koksal Karakus (karakusk(AT)hotmail.com), May 27 2002
Engel expansion of e^(1/2) (see A006784 for definition) [when offset by 1]. - Henry Bottomley, Dec 18 2000
Numbers n such that a 2n-group (i.e., a group of order 2n) has subgroup C_2. - Lekraj Beedassy, Oct 14 2004
Image of 1/(1-2x) under the mapping g(x)->g(x/(1+x^2)). - Paul Barry, Jan 16 2005
Position of n in A113322: A113322(a(n-1)) = n for n>0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 26 2005
Incrementally largest terms in the continued fraction for e. - Nick Hobson, Jan 11 2007
Conjecturally, the differences of two consecutive primes (without repetition). - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Nov 09 2009
Equals (1, 2, 2, 2, ...) convolved with (1, 0, 2, 0, 2, 0, 2, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Mar 03 2010
a(n) is the number of 0-dimensional elements (vertices) in an n-cross polytope. - Patrick J. McNab, Jul 06 2015
Numbers k such that in the symmetric representation of sigma(k) there is no pair bars as its ends (Cf. A237593). - Omar E. Pol, Sep 28 2018
Also, the coordination sequence of the L-lattice (see A332419). - Sean A. Irvine, Jul 29 2020

Crossrefs

INVERT transformation yields A098182 without A098182(0). - R. J. Mathar, Sep 11 2008

Programs

Formula

G.f.: (1+x^2)/(1-x)^2. - Paul Barry, Feb 28 2003
Inverse binomial transform of Cullen numbers A002064. a(n)=2n+0^n. - Paul Barry, Jun 12 2003
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} binomial(n-k-1)*(-1)^k*2^(n-2k). - Paul Barry, Jan 16 2005
Equals binomial transform of [1, 1, 1, -1, 1, -1, 1, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 15 2008
E.g.f.: 1+x*sinh(x) (aerated sequence). - Paul Barry, Oct 11 2009
a(n) = 0^n + 2*n = A000007(n) + A005843(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 11 2012

Extensions

Corrected by Charles R Greathouse IV, Mar 18 2010

A023110 Squares which remain squares when the last digit is removed.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 49, 169, 256, 361, 1444, 3249, 18496, 64009, 237169, 364816, 519841, 2079364, 4678569, 26666896, 92294449, 341991049, 526060096, 749609641, 2998438564, 6746486769, 38453641216, 133088524969, 493150849009, 758578289296, 1080936581761
Offset: 1

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Comments

This A023110 = A031149^2 is the base 10 version of A001541^2 = A055792 (base 2), A001075^2 = A055793 (base 3), A004275^2 = A055808 (base 4), A204520^2 = A055812 (base 5), A204518^2 = A055851 (base 6), A204516^2 = A055859 (base 7), A204514^2 = A055872 (base 8) and A204502^2 = A204503 (base 9). - M. F. Hasler, Sep 28 2014
For the first 4 terms the square has only one digit. It is understood that deleting this digit yields 0. - Colin Barker, Dec 31 2017

References

  • R. K. Guy, Neg and Reg, preprint, Jan 2012.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Maple
    count:= 1: A[1]:= 0:
    for n from 0 while count < 35 do
      for t in [1,4,6,9] do
        if issqr(10*n^2+t) then
           count:= count+1;
           A[count]:= 10*n^2+t;
        fi
      od
    od:
    seq(A[i],i=1..count); # Robert Israel, Sep 28 2014
  • Mathematica
    fQ[n_] := IntegerQ@ Sqrt@ Quotient[n^2, 10]; Select[ Range@ 1000000, fQ]^2 (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jan 15 2011 *)
  • PARI
    for(n=0,1e7, issquare(n^2\10) & print1(n^2",")) \\  M. F. Hasler, Jan 16 2012

Formula

Appears to satisfy a(n)=1444*a(n-7)+a(n-14)-76*sqrt(a(n-7)*a(n-14)) for n >= 16. For n = 15, 14, 13, ... this would require a(1) = 16, a(0) = 49, a(-1) = 169, ... - Henry Bottomley, May 08 2001; edited by Robert Israel, Sep 28 2014
a(n) = A031149(n)^2. - M. F. Hasler, Sep 28 2014
Conjectures from Colin Barker, Dec 31 2017: (Start)
G.f.: x^2*(1 + 4*x + 9*x^2 + 16*x^3 + 49*x^4 + 169*x^5 + 256*x^6 - 1082*x^7 - 4328*x^8 - 9738*x^9 - 4592*x^10 - 6698*x^11 - 6698*x^12 - 4592*x^13 + 361*x^14 + 1444*x^15 + 3249*x^16 + 256*x^17 + 169*x^18 + 49*x^19 + 16*x^20) / ((1 - x)*(1 + x + x^2 + x^3 + x^4 + x^5 + x^6)*(1 - 1442*x^7 + x^14)).
a(n) = 1443*a(n-7) - 1443*a(n-14) + a(n-21) for n>22.
(End)

Extensions

More terms from M. F. Hasler, Jan 16 2012

A031149 Numbers whose square with its last digit deleted is also a square.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 13, 16, 19, 38, 57, 136, 253, 487, 604, 721, 1442, 2163, 5164, 9607, 18493, 22936, 27379, 54758, 82137, 196096, 364813, 702247, 870964, 1039681, 2079362, 3119043, 7446484, 13853287, 26666893, 33073696, 39480499, 78960998, 118441497, 282770296
Offset: 1

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Comments

Square root of A023110(n).
For the first 4 terms, the square has only one digit, but in analogy to the sequences in other bases (A204502, A204512, A204514, A204516, A204518, A204520, A004275, A055793, A055792), it is understood that deleting this digit yields 0.
From Robert Israel, Feb 16 2016: (Start)
Solutions x to x^2 = 10*y^2 + j, j in {0,1,4,6,9}, in increasing order of x.
j=0 occurs only for x=0.
Let M be the 2 X 2 matrix [19, 60; 6, 19].
Solutions of x^2 = 10*y^2 + 1 are (x,y)^T = M^k (1,0)^T for k >= 0.
Solutions of x^2 = 10*y^2 + 4 are (x,y)^T = M^k (2,0)^T for k >= 0.
Solutions of x^2 = 10*y^2 + 6 are (x,y)^T = M^k (4,1)^T and M^k (16,5)^T for k >= 0.
Solutions of x^2 = 10*y^2 + 9 are (x,y)^T = M^k (3,0)^T, M^k (7,2)^T, M^k (13,4)^T for k >= 0.
Since (1,0)^T <= (2,0)^T <= (3,0)^T <= (4,1)^T <= (7,2)^T <= (13,4)^T <= (16,5)^T <= (19,6)^T = M (1,0)^T (element-wise) and M has positive entries, we see that the terms always occur in this order, for successive k.
The eigenvalues of M are 19 + 6*sqrt(10) and 19 - 6*sqrt(10).
From this follow my formulas below and the G.f. (End)

Examples

			364813^2 = 133088524969, 115364^2 = 13308852496.
		

References

  • R. K. Guy, Neg and Reg, preprint, Jan 2012. [From N. J. A. Sloane, Jan 12 2012]

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Maple
    for i from 1 to 150000 do if (floor(sqrt(10 * i^2 + 9)) > floor(sqrt(10 * i^2))) then print(floor(sqrt(10 * i^2 + 9))) end if end do;
  • Mathematica
    fQ[n_] := IntegerQ@ Sqrt@ Quotient[n^2, 10]; Select[ Range[ 0, 40000000], fQ] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jun 15 2011 *) (* modified by Robert G. Wilson v, Jan 16 2012 *)
  • PARI
    s=[]; for(n=0, 1e7, if(issquare(n^2\10), s=concat(s,n))); s \\ Colin Barker, Jan 17 2014; typo fixed by Zak Seidov, Jan 31 2014

Formula

Appears to satisfy: a(n)=38a(n-7)-a(n-14) which would require a(-k) to look like 3, 2, 1, 4, 7, 13, 16, 57, 38, 19, 136, ... for k>0. - Henry Bottomley, May 08 2001
Empirical g.f.: x^2*(1 + 2*x + 3*x^2 + 4*x^3 + 7*x^4 + 13*x^5 + 16*x^6 - 19*x^7 - 38*x^8 - 57*x^9 - 16*x^10 - 13*x^11 - 7*x^12 - 4*x^13) / ((1 - 38*x^7 + x^14)). - Colin Barker, Jan 17 2014
a(n) = 38*a(n-7) - a(n-14) for n>15 (conjectured). - Colin Barker, Dec 31 2017
With e1 = 19 + 6*sqrt(10) and e2 = 19 - 6*sqrt(10),
a(2+7k) = (e1^k + e2^k)/2,
a(3+7k) = e1^k + e2^k,
a(4+7k) = (3/2) (e1^k + e2^k),
a(5+7k) = (2+sqrt(10)/2) e1^k + (2-sqrt(10)/2) e2^k,
a(6+7k) = (7/2+sqrt(10)) e1^k + (7/2-sqrt(10)) e2^k,
a(7+7k) = (13/2+2 sqrt(10)) e1^k + (13/2-2 sqrt(10)) e2^k,
a(8+7k) = (8+5 sqrt(10)/2) e1^k + (8-5 sqrt(10)/2) e2^k. - Robert Israel, Feb 16 2016

Extensions

4 initial terms added by M. F. Hasler, Jan 15 2012
a(40) from Robert G. Wilson v, Jan 15 2012

A144396 The odd numbers greater than 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77, 79, 81, 83, 85, 87, 89, 91, 93, 95, 97, 99, 101, 103, 105, 107, 109, 111, 113, 115, 117, 119, 121, 123, 125, 127, 129, 131, 133
Offset: 1

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Author

Paul Curtz, Oct 03 2008

Keywords

Comments

Last number of the n-th row of the triangle described in A142717.
If negated, these are also the values at local minima of the sequence A141620.
a(n) is the shortest leg of the n-th Pythagorean triple with consecutive longer leg and hypotenuse. The n-th such triple is given by (2n+1,2n^2+2n, 2n^2+2n+1), so that the longer legs are A046092(n) and the hypotenuses are A099776(n). - Ant King, Feb 10 2011
Numbers k such that the symmetric representation of sigma(k) has a pair of bars as its ends (cf. A237593). - Omar E. Pol, Sep 28 2018
Numbers k such that there is a prime knot with k crossings and braid index 2. (IS this true with "prime" removed?) - Charles R Greathouse IV, Feb 14 2023

Crossrefs

Complement of A004275 and of A004277.
Essentially the same as A140139, A130773, A062545, A020735, A005818.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = A005408(n+1) = A000290(n+1) - A000290(n).
G.f.: x*(3-x)/(1-x)^2. - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Aug 30 2009
a(n) = A254858(n-1,2). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 09 2015

Extensions

Edited by R. J. Mathar, May 21 2009

A204502 Numbers such that floor[a(n)^2 / 9] is a square.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30, 33, 36, 39, 42, 45, 48, 51, 54, 57, 60, 63, 66, 69, 72, 75, 78, 81, 84, 87, 90, 93, 96, 99, 102, 105, 108, 111, 114, 117, 120, 123, 126, 129, 132, 135, 138, 141, 144, 147, 150, 153, 156, 159, 162, 165, 168, 171, 174, 177
Offset: 1

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Author

M. F. Hasler, Jan 15 2012

Keywords

Comments

Or, numbers n such that n^2, with its last base-9 digit dropped, is again a square. (Except maybe for the 3 initial terms whose square has only 1 digit in base 9.)

Crossrefs

The squares are in A204503, the squares with last base-9 digit dropped in A204504, and the square roots of the latter in A028310.
Cf. A031149=sqrt(A023110) (base 10), A204514=sqrt(A055872) (base 8), A204516=sqrt(A055859) (base 7), A204518=sqrt(A055851) (base 6), A204520=sqrt(A055812) (base 5), A004275=sqrt(A055808) (base 4), A001075=sqrt(A055793) (base 3), A001541=sqrt(A055792) (base 2).

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Select[Range[0,200],IntegerQ[Sqrt[Floor[#^2/9]]]&] (* Harvey P. Dale, May 05 2018 *)
  • PARI
    b=9;for(n=0,200,issquare(n^2\b) & print1(n","))

Formula

Conjecture: a(n) = 3*n-12 for n>5. G.f.: x^2*(x^2+x+1)*(x^3-x+1)/(x-1)^2. [Colin Barker, Nov 23 2012]

A204514 Numbers such that floor(a(n)^2 / 8) is again a square.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 3, 6, 17, 34, 99, 198, 577, 1154, 3363, 6726, 19601, 39202, 114243, 228486, 665857, 1331714, 3880899, 7761798, 22619537, 45239074, 131836323, 263672646, 768398401, 1536796802, 4478554083, 8957108166, 26102926097, 52205852194, 152139002499, 304278004998, 886731088897
Offset: 1

Views

Author

M. F. Hasler, Jan 15 2012

Keywords

Comments

Or: Numbers whose square, with its last base-8 digit dropped, is again a square. (Except maybe for the 3 initial terms whose square has only 1 digit in base 8.)
See A204504 for the squares resulting from truncation of a(n)^2, and A204512 for their square roots. - M. F. Hasler, Sep 28 2014

Crossrefs

Cf. A031149=sqrt(A023110) (base 10), A204502=sqrt(A204503) (base 9), A204516=sqrt(A055859) (base 7), A204518=sqrt(A055851) (base 6), A204520=sqrt(A055812) (base 5), A004275=sqrt(A055808) (base 4), A001075=sqrt(A055793) (base 3), A001541=sqrt(A055792) (base 2).

Programs

  • Maple
    A204514 := proc(n) coeftayl((x^2+2*x^3-3*x^4-6*x^5)/(1-6*x^2+x^4), x=0, n); end proc: seq(A204514(n), n=1..30); # Wesley Ivan Hurt, Sep 28 2014
  • Mathematica
    CoefficientList[Series[(x^2 + 2*x^3 - 3*x^4 - 6*x^5)/(x (1 - 6*x^2 + x^4)), {x, 0, 30}], x] (* Wesley Ivan Hurt, Sep 28 2014 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{0,6,0,-1},{0,1,2,3,6},40] (* Harvey P. Dale, Nov 23 2022 *)
  • PARI
    b=8;for(n=0,1e7,issquare(n^2\b) & print1(n","))
    
  • PARI
    A204514(n)=polcoeff((x + 2*x^2 - 3*x^3 - 6*x^4)/(1 - 6*x^2 + x^4+O(x^(n+!n))),n-1,x)

Formula

G.f. = (x^2 + 2*x^3 - 3*x^4 - 6*x^5)/(1 - 6*x^2 + x^4).
a(n) = sqrt(A055872(n)). - M. F. Hasler, Sep 28 2014
a(2n) = A001541(n-1). a(2n+1) = A003499(n-1). - R. J. Mathar, Feb 05 2020

A204516 Numbers such that floor(a(n)^2 / 7) is a square.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 3, 8, 16, 45, 127, 254, 717, 2024, 4048, 11427, 32257, 64514, 182115, 514088, 1028176, 2902413, 8193151, 16386302, 46256493, 130576328, 261152656, 737201475, 2081028097, 4162056194, 11748967107, 33165873224, 66331746448
Offset: 1

Views

Author

M. F. Hasler, Jan 15 2012

Keywords

Comments

Or: Numbers whose square, with its last base-7 digit dropped, is again a square (where for the first 3 terms, dropping the digit is meant to yield zero).

Crossrefs

Cf. A031149 (base 10), A204502 (base 9), A204514 (base 8), A204518 (base 6), A004275=sqrt(A055808) (base 4), A001075=sqrt(A055793) (base 3), A001541=sqrt(A055792) (base 2).

Programs

  • Mathematica
    LinearRecurrence[{0,0,16,0,0,-1},{0,1,2,3,8,16,45},30] (* or *) CoefficientList[Series[ (x+2x^2+3x^3-8x^4-16x^5-3x^6)/(1-16x^3+x^6),{x,0,30}],x] (* Harvey P. Dale, Apr 22 2023 *)
  • PARI
    b=7;for(n=0,2e9,issquare(n^2\b) & print1(n","))

Formula

G.f. = (x + 2*x^2 + 3*x^3 - 8*x^4 - 16*x^5 - 3*x^6 )/(1 - 16*x^3 + x^6).
floor(a(n)^2 / 7) = A204517(n)^2.
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