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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A000217 Triangular numbers: a(n) = binomial(n+1,2) = n*(n+1)/2 = 0 + 1 + 2 + ... + n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 15, 21, 28, 36, 45, 55, 66, 78, 91, 105, 120, 136, 153, 171, 190, 210, 231, 253, 276, 300, 325, 351, 378, 406, 435, 465, 496, 528, 561, 595, 630, 666, 703, 741, 780, 820, 861, 903, 946, 990, 1035, 1081, 1128, 1176, 1225, 1275, 1326, 1378, 1431
Offset: 0

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Also referred to as T(n) or C(n+1, 2) or binomial(n+1, 2) (preferred).
Also generalized hexagonal numbers: n*(2*n-1), n=0, +-1, +-2, +-3, ... Generalized k-gonal numbers are second k-gonal numbers and positive terms of k-gonal numbers interleaved, k >= 5. In this case k = 6. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 13 2011 and Aug 04 2012
Number of edges in complete graph of order n+1, K_{n+1}.
Number of legal ways to insert a pair of parentheses in a string of n letters. E.g., there are 6 ways for three letters: (a)bc, (ab)c, (abc), a(b)c, a(bc), ab(c). Proof: there are C(n+2,2) ways to choose where the parentheses might go, but n + 1 of them are illegal because the parentheses are adjacent. Cf. A002415.
For n >= 1, a(n) is also the genus of a nonsingular curve of degree n+2, such as the Fermat curve x^(n+2) + y^(n+2) = 1. - Ahmed Fares (ahmedfares(AT)my_deja.com), Feb 21 2001
From Harnack's theorem (1876), the number of branches of a nonsingular curve of order n is bounded by a(n-1)+1, and the bound can be achieved. See also A152947. - Benoit Cloitre, Aug 29 2002. Corrected by Robert McLachlan, Aug 19 2024
Number of tiles in the set of double-n dominoes. - Scott A. Brown, Sep 24 2002
Number of ways a chain of n non-identical links can be broken up. This is based on a similar problem in the field of proteomics: the number of ways a peptide of n amino acid residues can be broken up in a mass spectrometer. In general, each amino acid has a different mass, so AB and BC would have different masses. - James A. Raymond, Apr 08 2003
Triangular numbers - odd numbers = shifted triangular numbers; 1, 3, 6, 10, 15, 21, ... - 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, ... = 0, 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, ... - Xavier Acloque, Oct 31 2003 [Corrected by Derek Orr, May 05 2015]
Centered polygonal numbers are the result of [number of sides * A000217 + 1]. E.g., centered pentagonal numbers (1,6,16,31,...) = 5 * (0,1,3,6,...) + 1. Centered heptagonal numbers (1,8,22,43,...) = 7 * (0,1,3,6,...) + 1. - Xavier Acloque, Oct 31 2003
Maximum number of lines formed by the intersection of n+1 planes. - Ron R. King, Mar 29 2004
Number of permutations of [n] which avoid the pattern 132 and have exactly 1 descent. - Mike Zabrocki, Aug 26 2004
Number of ternary words of length n-1 with subwords (0,1), (0,2) and (1,2) not allowed. - Olivier Gérard, Aug 28 2012
Number of ways two different numbers can be selected from the set {0,1,2,...,n} without repetition, or, number of ways two different numbers can be selected from the set {1,2,...,n} with repetition.
Conjecturally, 1, 6, 120 are the only numbers that are both triangular and factorial. - Christopher M. Tomaszewski (cmt1288(AT)comcast.net), Mar 30 2005
Binomial transform is {0, 1, 5, 18, 56, 160, 432, ...}, A001793 with one leading zero. - Philippe Deléham, Aug 02 2005
Each pair of neighboring terms adds to a perfect square. - Zak Seidov, Mar 21 2006
Number of transpositions in the symmetric group of n+1 letters, i.e., the number of permutations that leave all but two elements fixed. - Geoffrey Critzer, Jun 23 2006
With rho(n):=exp(i*2*Pi/n) (an n-th root of 1) one has, for n >= 1, rho(n)^a(n) = (-1)^(n+1). Just use the triviality a(2*k+1) == 0 (mod (2*k+1)) and a(2*k) == k (mod (2*k)).
a(n) is the number of terms in the expansion of (a_1 + a_2 + a_3)^(n-1). - Sergio Falcon, Feb 12 2007
a(n+1) is the number of terms in the complete homogeneous symmetric polynomial of degree n in 2 variables. - Richard Barnes, Sep 06 2017
The number of distinct handshakes in a room with n+1 people. - Mohammad K. Azarian, Apr 12 2007 [corrected, Joerg Arndt, Jan 18 2016]
Equal to the rank (minimal cardinality of a generating set) of the semigroup PT_n\S_n, where PT_n and S_n denote the partial transformation semigroup and symmetric group on [n]. - James East, May 03 2007
a(n) gives the total number of triangles found when cevians are drawn from a single vertex on a triangle to the side opposite that vertex, where n = the number of cevians drawn+1. For instance, with 1 cevian drawn, n = 1+1 = 2 and a(n)= 2*(2+1)/2 = 3 so there is a total of 3 triangles in the figure. If 2 cevians are drawn from one point to the opposite side, then n = 1+2 = 3 and a(n) = 3*(3+1)/2 = 6 so there is a total of 6 triangles in the figure. - Noah Priluck (npriluck(AT)gmail.com), Apr 30 2007
For n >= 1, a(n) is the number of ways in which n-1 can be written as a sum of three nonnegative integers if representations differing in the order of the terms are considered to be different. In other words, for n >= 1, a(n) is the number of nonnegative integral solutions of the equation x + y + z = n-1. - Amarnath Murthy, Apr 22 2001 (edited by Robert A. Beeler)
a(n) is the number of levels with energy n + 3/2 (in units of h*f0, with Planck's constant h and the oscillator frequency f0) of the three-dimensional isotropic harmonic quantum oscillator. See the comment by A. Murthy above: n = n1 + n2 + n3 with positive integers and ordered. Proof from the o.g.f. See the A. Messiah reference. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jun 29 2007
From Hieronymus Fischer, Aug 06 2007: (Start)
Numbers m >= 0 such that round(sqrt(2m+1)) - round(sqrt(2m)) = 1.
Numbers m >= 0 such that ceiling(2*sqrt(2m+1)) - 1 = 1 + floor(2*sqrt(2m)).
Numbers m >= 0 such that fract(sqrt(2m+1)) > 1/2 and fract(sqrt(2m)) < 1/2, where fract(x) is the fractional part of x (i.e., x - floor(x), x >= 0). (End)
If Y and Z are 3-blocks of an n-set X, then, for n >= 6, a(n-1) is the number of (n-2)-subsets of X intersecting both Y and Z. - Milan Janjic, Nov 09 2007
Equals row sums of triangle A143320, n > 0. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 07 2008
a(n) is also an even perfect number in A000396 iff n is a Mersenne prime A000668. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 05 2008. Unnecessary assumption removed and clarified by Rick L. Shepherd, Apr 14 2025
Equals row sums of triangle A152204. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 29 2008
The number of matches played in a round robin tournament: n*(n-1)/2 gives the number of matches needed for n players. Everyone plays against everyone else exactly once. - Georg Wrede (georg(AT)iki.fi), Dec 18 2008
-a(n+1) = E(2)*binomial(n+2,2) (n >= 0) where E(n) are the Euler numbers in the enumeration A122045. Viewed this way, a(n) is the special case k=2 in the sequence of diagonals in the triangle A153641. - Peter Luschny, Jan 06 2009
Equivalent to the first differences of successive tetrahedral numbers. See A000292. - Jeremy Cahill (jcahill(AT)inbox.com), Apr 15 2009
The general formula for alternating sums of powers is in terms of the Swiss-Knife polynomials P(n,x) A153641 2^(-n-1)(P(n,1)-(-1)^k P(n,2k+1)). Thus a(k) = |2^(-3)(P(2,1)-(-1)^k P(2,2k+1))|. - Peter Luschny, Jul 12 2009
a(n) is the smallest number > a(n-1) such that gcd(n,a(n)) = gcd(n,a(n-1)). If n is odd this gcd is n; if n is even it is n/2. - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Aug 06 2009
Partial sums of A001477. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Jan 25 2010. [A-number corrected by Omar E. Pol, Jun 05 2012]
The numbers along the right edge of Floyd's triangle are 1, 3, 6, 10, 15, .... - Paul Muljadi, Jan 25 2010
From Charlie Marion, Dec 03 2010: (Start)
More generally, a(2k+1) == j*(2j-1) (mod 2k+2j+1) and
a(2k) == [-k + 2j*(j-1)] (mod 2k+2j).
Column sums of:
1 3 5 7 9 ...
1 3 5 ...
1 ...
...............
---------------
1 3 6 10 15 ...
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n)^2 = 4*Pi^2/3-12 = 12 less than the volume of a sphere with radius Pi^(1/3).
(End)
A004201(a(n)) = A000290(n); A004202(a(n)) = A002378(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 12 2011
1/a(n+1), n >= 0, has e.g.f. -2*(1+x-exp(x))/x^2, and o.g.f. 2*(x+(1-x)*log(1-x))/x^2 (see the Stephen Crowley formula line). -1/(2*a(n+1)) is the z-sequence for the Sheffer triangle of the coefficients of the Bernoulli polynomials A196838/A196839. - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 26 2011
From Charlie Marion, Feb 23 2012: (Start)
a(n) + a(A002315(k)*n + A001108(k+1)) = (A001653(k+1)*n + A001109(k+1))^2. For k=0 we obtain a(n) + a(n+1) = (n+1)^2 (identity added by N. J. A. Sloane on Feb 19 2004).
a(n) + a(A002315(k)*n - A055997(k+1)) = (A001653(k+1)*n - A001109(k))^2.
(End)
Plot the three points (0,0), (a(n), a(n+1)), (a(n+1), a(n+2)) to form a triangle. The area will be a(n+1)/2. - J. M. Bergot, May 04 2012
The sum of four consecutive triangular numbers, beginning with a(n)=n*(n+1)/2, minus 2 is 2*(n+2)^2. a(n)*a(n+2)/2 = a(a(n+1)-1). - J. M. Bergot, May 17 2012
(a(n)*a(n+3) - a(n+1)*a(n+2))*(a(n+1)*a(n+4) - a(n+2)*a(n+3))/8 = a((n^2+5*n+4)/2). - J. M. Bergot, May 18 2012
a(n)*a(n+1) + a(n+2)*a(n+3) + 3 = a(n^2 + 4*n + 6). - J. M. Bergot, May 22 2012
In general, a(n)*a(n+1) + a(n+k)*a(n+k+1) + a(k-1)*a(k) = a(n^2 + (k+2)*n + k*(k+1)). - Charlie Marion, Sep 11 2012
a(n)*a(n+3) + a(n+1)*a(n+2) = a(n^2 + 4*n + 2). - J. M. Bergot, May 22 2012
In general, a(n)*a(n+k) + a(n+1)*a(n+k-1) = a(n^2 + (k+1)*n + k-1). - Charlie Marion, Sep 11 2012
a(n)*a(n+2) + a(n+1)*a(n+3) = a(n^2 + 4*n + 3). - J. M. Bergot, May 22 2012
Three points (a(n),a(n+1)), (a(n+1),a(n)) and (a(n+2),a(n+3)) form a triangle with area 4*a(n+1). - J. M. Bergot, May 23 2012
a(n) + a(n+k) = (n+k)^2 - (k^2 + (2n-1)*k -2n)/2. For k=1 we obtain a(n) + a(n+1) = (n+1)^2 (see below). - Charlie Marion, Oct 02 2012
In n-space we can define a(n-1) nontrivial orthogonal projections. For example, in 3-space there are a(2)=3 (namely point onto line, point onto plane, line onto plane). - Douglas Latimer, Dec 17 2012
From James East, Jan 08 2013: (Start)
For n >= 1, a(n) is equal to the rank (minimal cardinality of a generating set) and idempotent rank (minimal cardinality of an idempotent generating set) of the semigroup P_n\S_n, where P_n and S_n denote the partition monoid and symmetric group on [n].
For n >= 3, a(n-1) is equal to the rank and idempotent rank of the semigroup T_n\S_n, where T_n and S_n denote the full transformation semigroup and symmetric group on [n].
(End)
For n >= 3, a(n) is equal to the rank and idempotent rank of the semigroup PT_n\S_n, where PT_n and S_n denote the partial transformation semigroup and symmetric group on [n]. - James East, Jan 15 2013
Conjecture: For n > 0, there is always a prime between A000217(n) and A000217(n+1). Sequence A065383 has the first 1000 of these primes. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Mar 11 2013
The formula, a(n)*a(n+4k+2)/2 + a(k) = a(a(n+2k+1) - (k^2+(k+1)^2)), is a generalization of the formula a(n)*a(n+2)/2 = a(a(n+1)-1) in Bergot's comment dated May 17 2012. - Charlie Marion, Mar 28 2013
The series Sum_{k>=1} 1/a(k) = 2, given in a formula below by Jon Perry, Jul 13 2003, has partial sums 2*n/(n+1) (telescopic sum) = A022998(n)/A026741(n+1). - Wolfdieter Lang, Apr 09 2013
For odd m = 2k+1, we have the recurrence a(m*n + k) = m^2*a(n) + a(k). Corollary: If number T is in the sequence then so is 9*T+1. - Lekraj Beedassy, May 29 2013
Euler, in Section 87 of the Opera Postuma, shows that whenever T is a triangular number then 9*T + 1, 25*T + 3, 49*T + 6 and 81*T + 10 are also triangular numbers. In general, if T is a triangular number then (2*k + 1)^2*T + k*(k + 1)/2 is also a triangular number. - Peter Bala, Jan 05 2015
Using 1/b and 1/(b+2) will give a Pythagorean triangle with sides 2*b + 2, b^2 + 2*b, and b^2 + 2*b + 2. Set b=n-1 to give a triangle with sides of lengths 2*n,n^2-1, and n^2 + 1. One-fourth the perimeter = a(n) for n > 1. - J. M. Bergot, Jul 24 2013
a(n) = A028896(n)/6, where A028896(n) = s(n) - s(n-1) are the first differences of s(n) = n^3 + 3*n^2 + 2*n - 8. s(n) can be interpreted as the sum of the 12 edge lengths plus the sum of the 6 face areas plus the volume of an n X (n-1) X (n-2) rectangular prism. - J. M. Bergot, Aug 13 2013
Dimension of orthogonal group O(n+1). - Eric M. Schmidt, Sep 08 2013
Number of positive roots in the root system of type A_n (for n > 0). - Tom Edgar, Nov 05 2013
A formula for the r-th successive summation of k, for k = 1 to n, is binomial(n+r,r+1) [H. W. Gould]. - Gary Detlefs, Jan 02 2014
Also the alternating row sums of A095831. Also the alternating row sums of A055461, for n >= 1. - Omar E. Pol, Jan 26 2014
For n >= 3, a(n-2) is the number of permutations of 1,2,...,n with the distribution of up (1) - down (0) elements 0...011 (n-3 zeros), or, the same, a(n-2) is up-down coefficient {n,3} (see comment in A060351). - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 14 2014
a(n) is the dimension of the vector space of symmetric n X n matrices. - Derek Orr, Mar 29 2014
Non-vanishing subdiagonal of A132440^2/2, aside from the initial zero. First subdiagonal of unsigned A238363. Cf. A130534 for relations to colored forests, disposition of flags on flagpoles, and colorings of the vertices of complete graphs. - Tom Copeland, Apr 05 2014
The number of Sidon subsets of {1,...,n+1} of size 2. - Carl Najafi, Apr 27 2014
Number of factors in the definition of the Vandermonde determinant V(x_1,x_2,...,x_n) = Product_{1 <= i < k <= n} x_i - x_k. - Tom Copeland, Apr 27 2014
Number of weak compositions of n into three parts. - Robert A. Beeler, May 20 2014
Suppose a bag contains a(n) red marbles and a(n+1) blue marbles, where a(n), a(n+1) are consecutive triangular numbers. Then, for n > 0, the probability of choosing two marbles at random and getting two red or two blue is 1/2. In general, for k > 2, let b(0) = 0, b(1) = 1 and, for n > 1, b(n) = (k-1)*b(n-1) - b(n-2) + 1. Suppose, for n > 0, a bag contains b(n) red marbles and b(n+1) blue marbles. Then the probability of choosing two marbles at random and getting two red or two blue is (k-1)/(k+1). See also A027941, A061278, A089817, A053142, A092521. - Charlie Marion, Nov 03 2014
Let O(n) be the oblong number n(n+1) = A002378 and S(n) the square number n^2 = A000290(n). Then a(4n) = O(3n) - O(n), a(4n+1) = S(3n+1) - S(n), a(4n+2) = S(3n+2) - S(n+1) and a(4n+3) = O(3n+2) - O(n). - Charlie Marion, Feb 21 2015
Consider the partition of the natural numbers into parts from the set S=(1,2,3,...,n). The length (order) of the signature of the resulting sequence is given by the triangular numbers. E.g., for n=10, the signature length is 55. - David Neil McGrath, May 05 2015
a(n) counts the partitions of (n-1) unlabeled objects into three (3) parts (labeled a,b,c), e.g., a(5)=15 for (n-1)=4. These are (aaaa),(bbbb),(cccc),(aaab),(aaac),(aabb),(aacc),(aabc),(abbc),(abcc),(abbb),(accc),(bbcc),(bccc),(bbbc). - David Neil McGrath, May 21 2015
Conjecture: the sequence is the genus/deficiency of the sinusoidal spirals of index n which are algebraic curves. The value 0 corresponds to the case of the Bernoulli Lemniscate n=2. So the formula conjectured is (n-1)(n-2)/2. - Wolfgang Tintemann, Aug 02 2015
Conjecture: Let m be any positive integer. Then, for each n = 1,2,3,... the set {Sum_{k=s..t} 1/k^m: 1 <= s <= t <= n} has cardinality a(n) = n*(n+1)/2; in other words, all the sums Sum_{k=s..t} 1/k^m with 1 <= s <= t are pairwise distinct. (I have checked this conjecture via a computer and found no counterexample.) - Zhi-Wei Sun, Sep 09 2015
The Pisano period lengths of reading the sequence modulo m seem to be A022998(m). - R. J. Mathar, Nov 29 2015
For n >= 1, a(n) is the number of compositions of n+4 into n parts avoiding the part 2. - Milan Janjic, Jan 07 2016
In this sequence only 3 is prime. - Fabian Kopp, Jan 09 2016
Suppose you are playing Bulgarian Solitaire (see A242424 and Chamberland's and Gardner's books) and, for n > 0, you are starting with a single pile of a(n) cards. Then the number of operations needed to reach the fixed state {n, n-1,...,1} is a(n-1). For example, {6}->{5,1}->{4,2}->{3,2,1}. - Charlie Marion, Jan 14 2016
Numbers k such that 8k + 1 is a square. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Apr 09 2016
Every perfect cube is the difference of the squares of two consecutive triangular numbers. 1^2-0^2 = 1^3, 3^2-1^2 = 2^3, 6^2-3^2 = 3^3. - Miquel Cerda, Jun 26 2016
For n > 1, a(n) = tau_n(k*) where tau_n(k) is the number of ordered n-factorizations of k and k* is the square of a prime. For example, tau_3(4) = tau_3(9) = tau_3(25) = tau_3(49) = 6 (see A007425) since the number of divisors of 4, 9, 25, and 49's divisors is 6, and a(3) = 6. - Melvin Peralta, Aug 29 2016
In an (n+1)-dimensional hypercube, number of two-dimensional faces congruent with a vertex (see also A001788). - Stanislav Sykora, Oct 23 2016
Generalizations of the familiar formulas, a(n) + a(n+1) = (n+1)^2 (Feb 19 2004) and a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = a((n+1)^2) (Nov 22 2006), follow: a(n) + a(n+2k-1) + 4a(k-1) = (n+k)^2 + 6a(k-1) and a(n)^2 + a(n+2k-1)^2 + (4a(k-1))^2 + 3a(k-1) = a((n+k)^2 + 6a(k-1)). - Charlie Marion, Nov 27 2016
a(n) is also the greatest possible number of diagonals in a polyhedron with n+4 vertices. - Vladimir Letsko, Dec 19 2016
For n > 0, 2^5 * (binomial(n+1,2))^2 represents the first integer in a sum of 2*(2*n + 1)^2 consecutive integers that equals (2*n + 1)^6. - Patrick J. McNab, Dec 25 2016
Does not satisfy Benford's law (cf. Ross, 2012). - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 12 2017
Number of ordered triples (a,b,c) of positive integers not larger than n such that a+b+c = 2n+1. - Aviel Livay, Feb 13 2017
Number of inequivalent tetrahedral face colorings using at most n colors so that no color appears only once. - David Nacin, Feb 22 2017
Also the Wiener index of the complete graph K_{n+1}. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 07 2017
Number of intersections between the Bernstein polynomials of degree n. - Eric Desbiaux, Apr 01 2018
a(n) is the area of a triangle with vertices at (1,1), (n+1,n+2), and ((n+1)^2, (n+2)^2). - Art Baker, Dec 06 2018
For n > 0, a(n) is the smallest k > 0 such that n divides numerator of (1/a(1) + 1/a(2) + ... + 1/a(n-1) + 1/k). It should be noted that 1/1 + 1/3 + 1/6 + ... + 2/(n(n+1)) = 2n/(n+1). - Thomas Ordowski, Aug 04 2019
Upper bound of the number of lines in an n-homogeneous supersolvable line arrangement (see Theorem 1.1 in Dimca). - Stefano Spezia, Oct 04 2019
For n > 0, a(n+1) is the number of lattice points on a triangular grid with side length n. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Aug 12 2020
From Michael Chu, May 04 2022: (Start)
Maximum number of distinct nonempty substrings of a string of length n.
Maximum cardinality of the sumset A+A, where A is a set of n numbers. (End)
a(n) is the number of parking functions of size n avoiding the patterns 123, 132, and 312. - Lara Pudwell, Apr 10 2023
Suppose two rows, each consisting of n evenly spaced dots, are drawn in parallel. Suppose we bijectively draw lines between the dots of the two rows. For n >= 1, a(n - 1) is the maximal possible number of intersections between the lines. Equivalently, the maximal number of inversions in a permutation of [n]. - Sela Fried, Apr 18 2023
The following equation complements the generalization in Bala's Comment (Jan 05 2015). (2k + 1)^2*a(n) + a(k) = a((2k + 1)*n + k). - Charlie Marion, Aug 28 2023
a(n) + a(n+k) + a(k-1) + (k-1)*n = (n+k)^2. For k = 1, we have a(n) + a(n+1) = (n+1)^2. - Charlie Marion, Nov 17 2023
a(n+1)/3 is the expected number of steps to escape from a linear row of n positions starting at a random location and randomly performing steps -1 or +1 with equal probability. - Hugo Pfoertner, Jul 22 2025
a(n+1) is the number of nonnegative integer solutions to p + q + r = n. By Sylvester's law of inertia, it is also the number of congruence classes of real symmetric n-by-n matrices or equivalently, the number of symmetric bilinear forms on a real n-dimensional vector space. - Paawan Jethva, Jul 24 2025

Examples

			G.f.: x + 3*x^2 + 6*x^3 + 10*x^4 + 15*x^5 + 21*x^6 + 28*x^7 + 36*x^8 + 45*x^9 + ...
When n=3, a(3) = 4*3/2 = 6.
Example(a(4)=10): ABCD where A, B, C and D are different links in a chain or different amino acids in a peptide possible fragments: A, B, C, D, AB, ABC, ABCD, BC, BCD, CD = 10.
a(2): hollyhock leaves on the Tokugawa Mon, a(4): points in Pythagorean tetractys, a(5): object balls in eight-ball billiards. - _Bradley Klee_, Aug 24 2015
From _Gus Wiseman_, Oct 28 2020: (Start)
The a(1) = 1 through a(5) = 15 ordered triples of positive integers summing to n + 2 [Beeler, McGrath above] are the following. These compositions are ranked by A014311.
  (111)  (112)  (113)  (114)  (115)
         (121)  (122)  (123)  (124)
         (211)  (131)  (132)  (133)
                (212)  (141)  (142)
                (221)  (213)  (151)
                (311)  (222)  (214)
                       (231)  (223)
                       (312)  (232)
                       (321)  (241)
                       (411)  (313)
                              (322)
                              (331)
                              (412)
                              (421)
                              (511)
The unordered version is A001399(n-3) = A069905(n), with Heinz numbers A014612.
The strict case is A001399(n-6)*6, ranked by A337453.
The unordered strict case is A001399(n-6), with Heinz numbers A007304.
(End)
		

References

  • M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards Applied Math. Series 55, 1964 (and various reprintings), p. 828.
  • C. Alsina and R. B. Nelson, Charming Proofs: A Journey into Elegant Mathematics, MAA, 2010. See Chapter 1.
  • T. M. Apostol, Introduction to Analytic Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 1976, page 2.
  • A. H. Beiler, Recreations in the Theory of Numbers, Dover, NY, 1964, p. 189.
  • A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, p. 109ff.
  • Marc Chamberland, Single Digits: In Praise of Small Numbers, Chapter 3, The Number Three, p. 72, Princeton University Press, 2015.
  • L. Comtet, Advanced Combinatorics, Reidel, 1974, p. 155.
  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 33, 38, 40, 70.
  • J. M. De Koninck and A. Mercier, 1001 Problèmes en Théorie Classique des Nombres, Problème 309 pp 46-196, Ellipses, Paris, 2004
  • E. Deza and M. M. Deza, Figurate numbers, World Scientific Publishing (2012), page 6.
  • L. E. Dickson, History of the Theory of Numbers. Carnegie Institute Public. 256, Washington, DC, Vol. 1, 1919; Vol. 2, 1920; Vol. 3, 1923, see vol. 2, p. 1.
  • Martin Gardner, Colossal Book of Mathematics, Chapter 34, Bulgarian Solitaire and Other Seemingly Endless Tasks, pp. 455-467, W. W. Norton & Company, 2001.
  • James Gleick, The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood, Pantheon, 2011. [On page 82 mentions a table of the first 19999 triangular numbers published by E. de Joncort in 1762.]
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §4.6 Mathematical Proof and §8.6 Figurate Numbers, pp. 158-159, 289-290.
  • Cay S. Horstmann, Scala for the Impatient. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Addison-Wesley (2012): 171.
  • Elemer Labos, On the number of RGB-colors we can distinguish. Partition Spectra. Lecture at 7th Hungarian Conference on Biometry and Biomathematics. Budapest. Jul 06 2005.
  • A. Messiah, Quantum Mechanics, Vol.1, North Holland, Amsterdam, 1965, p. 457.
  • J. C. P. Miller, editor, Table of Binomial Coefficients. Royal Society Mathematical Tables, Vol. 3, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1954.
  • Alfred S. Posamentier, Math Charmers, Tantalizing Tidbits for the Mind, Prometheus Books, NY, 2003, pages 52-53, 129-132, 274.
  • 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 2-6, 13.
  • T. Trotter, Some Identities for the Triangular Numbers, Journal of Recreational Mathematics, Spring 1973, 6(2).
  • D. Wells, The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers, pp. 91-93 Penguin Books 1987.

Crossrefs

The figurate numbers, with parameter k as in the second Python program: A001477 (k=0), this sequence (k=1), A000290 (k=2), A000326 (k=3), A000384 (k=4), A000566 (k=5), A000567 (k=6), A001106 (k=7), A001107 (k=8).
a(n) = A110449(n, 0).
a(n) = A110555(n+2, 2).
A diagonal of A008291.
Column 2 of A195152.
Numbers of the form n*t(n+k,h)-(n+k)*t(n,h), where t(i,h) = i*(i+2*h+1)/2 for any h (for A000217 is k=1): A005563, A067728, A140091, A140681, A212331.
Boustrophedon transforms: A000718, A000746.
Iterations: A007501 (start=2), A013589 (start=4), A050542 (start=5), A050548 (start=7), A050536 (start=8), A050909 (start=9).
Cf. A002817 (doubly triangular numbers), A075528 (solutions of a(n)=a(m)/2).
Cf. A104712 (first column, starting with a(1)).
Some generalized k-gonal numbers are A001318 (k=5), this sequence (k=6), A085787 (k=7), etc.
A001399(n-3) = A069905(n) = A211540(n+2) counts 3-part partitions.
A001399(n-6) = A069905(n-3) = A211540(n-1) counts 3-part strict partitions.
A011782 counts compositions of any length.
A337461 counts pairwise coprime triples, with unordered version A307719.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a000217 n = a000217_list !! n
    a000217_list = scanl1 (+) [0..] -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 23 2011
    
  • J
    a000217=: *-:@>: NB. Stephen Makdisi, May 02 2018
    
  • Magma
    [n*(n+1)/2: n in [0..60]]; // Bruno Berselli, Jul 11 2014
    
  • Magma
    [n: n in [0..1500] | IsSquare(8*n+1)]; // Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Apr 09 2016
    
  • Maple
    A000217 := proc(n) n*(n+1)/2; end;
    istriangular:=proc(n) local t1; t1:=floor(sqrt(2*n)); if n = t1*(t1+1)/2 then return true else return false; end if; end proc; # N. J. A. Sloane, May 25 2008
    ZL := [S, {S=Prod(B, B, B), B=Set(Z, 1 <= card)}, unlabeled]:
    seq(combstruct[count](ZL, size=n), n=2..55); # Zerinvary Lajos, Mar 24 2007
    isA000217 := proc(n)
        issqr(1+8*n) ;
    end proc: # R. J. Mathar, Nov 29 2015 [This is the recipe Leonhard Euler proposes in chapter VII of his "Vollständige Anleitung zur Algebra", 1765. Peter Luschny, Sep 02 2022]
  • Mathematica
    Array[ #*(# - 1)/2 &, 54] (* Zerinvary Lajos, Jul 10 2009 *)
    FoldList[#1 + #2 &, 0, Range@ 50] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Feb 02 2011 *)
    Accumulate[Range[0,70]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Sep 09 2012 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[x / (1 - x)^3, {x, 0, 50}], x] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Jul 30 2014 *)
    (* For Mathematica 10.4+ *) Table[PolygonalNumber[n], {n, 0, 53}] (* Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Aug 27 2016 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{3, -3, 1}, {0, 1, 3}, 54] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Dec 04 2016 *)
    (* The following Mathematica program, courtesy of Steven J. Miller, is useful for testing if a sequence is Benford. To test a different sequence only one line needs to be changed. This strongly suggests that the triangular numbers are not Benford, since the second and third columns of the output disagree. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 12 2017 *)
    fd[x_] := Floor[10^Mod[Log[10, x], 1]]
    benfordtest[num_] := Module[{},
       For[d = 1, d <= 9, d++, digit[d] = 0];
       For[n = 1, n <= num, n++,
        {
         d = fd[n(n+1)/2];
         If[d != 0, digit[d] = digit[d] + 1];
         }];
       For[d = 1, d <= 9, d++, digit[d] = 1.0 digit[d]/num];
       For[d = 1, d <= 9, d++,
        Print[d, " ", 100.0 digit[d], " ", 100.0 Log[10, (d + 1)/d]]];
       ];
    benfordtest[20000]
    Table[Length[Join@@Permutations/@IntegerPartitions[n,{3}]],{n,0,15}] (* Gus Wiseman, Oct 28 2020 *)
  • PARI
    A000217(n) = n * (n + 1) / 2;
    
  • PARI
    is_A000217(n)=n*2==(1+n=sqrtint(2*n))*n \\ M. F. Hasler, May 24 2012
    
  • PARI
    is(n)=ispolygonal(n,3) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Feb 28 2014
    
  • PARI
    list(lim)=my(v=List(),n,t); while((t=n*n++/2)<=lim,listput(v,t)); Vec(v) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Jun 18 2021
    
  • Python
    for n in range(0,60): print(n*(n+1)//2, end=', ') # Stefano Spezia, Dec 06 2018
    
  • Python
    # Intended to compute the initial segment of the sequence, not
    # isolated terms. If in the iteration the line "x, y = x + y + 1, y + 1"
    # is replaced by "x, y = x + y + k, y + k" then the figurate numbers are obtained,
    # for k = 0 (natural A001477), k = 1 (triangular), k = 2 (squares), k = 3 (pentagonal), k = 4 (hexagonal), k = 5 (heptagonal), k = 6 (octagonal), etc.
    def aList():
        x, y = 1, 1
        yield 0
        while True:
            yield x
            x, y = x + y + 1, y + 1
    A000217 = aList()
    print([next(A000217) for i in range(54)]) # Peter Luschny, Aug 03 2019
  • SageMath
    [n*(n+1)/2 for n in (0..60)] # Bruno Berselli, Jul 11 2014
    
  • Scala
    (1 to 53).scanLeft(0)( + ) // Horstmann (2012), p. 171
    
  • Scheme
    (define (A000217 n) (/ (* n (+ n 1)) 2)) ;; Antti Karttunen, Jul 08 2017
    

Formula

G.f.: x/(1-x)^3. - Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(x+x^2/2).
a(n) = a(-1-n).
a(n) + a(n-1)*a(n+1) = a(n)^2. - Terrel Trotter, Jr., Apr 08 2002
a(n) = (-1)^n*Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^k*k^2. - Benoit Cloitre, Aug 29 2002
a(n+1) = ((n+2)/n)*a(n), Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 2. - Jon Perry, Jul 13 2003
For n > 0, a(n) = A001109(n) - Sum_{k=0..n-1} (2*k+1)*A001652(n-1-k); e.g., 10 = 204 - (1*119 + 3*20 + 5*3 + 7*0). - Charlie Marion, Jul 18 2003
With interpolated zeros, this is n*(n+2)*(1+(-1)^n)/16. - Benoit Cloitre, Aug 19 2003
a(n+1) is the determinant of the n X n symmetric Pascal matrix M_(i, j) = binomial(i+j+1, i). - Benoit Cloitre, Aug 19 2003
a(n) = ((n+1)^3 - n^3 - 1)/6. - Xavier Acloque, Oct 24 2003
a(n) = a(n-1) + (1 + sqrt(1 + 8*a(n-1)))/2. This recursive relation is inverted when taking the negative branch of the square root, i.e., a(n) is transformed into a(n-1) rather than a(n+1). - Carl R. White, Nov 04 2003
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} phi(k)*floor(n/k) = Sum_{k=1..n} A000010(k)*A010766(n, k) (R. Dedekind). - Vladeta Jovovic, Feb 05 2004
a(n) + a(n+1) = (n+1)^2. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 19 2004
a(n) = a(n-2) + 2*n - 1. - Paul Barry, Jul 17 2004
a(n) = sqrt(Sum_{i=1..n} Sum_{j=1..n} (i*j)) = sqrt(A000537(n)). - Alexander Adamchuk, Oct 24 2004
a(n) = sqrt(sqrt(Sum_{i=1..n} Sum_{j=1..n} (i*j)^3)) = (Sum_{i=1..n} Sum_{j=1..n} Sum_{k=1..n} (i*j*k)^3)^(1/6). - Alexander Adamchuk, Oct 26 2004
a(n) == 1 (mod n+2) if n is odd and a(n) == n/2+2 (mod n+2) if n is even. - Jon Perry, Dec 16 2004
a(0) = 0, a(1) = 1, a(n) = 2*a(n-1) - a(n-2) + 1. - Miklos Kristof, Mar 09 2005
a(n) = a(n-1) + n. - Zak Seidov, Mar 06 2005
a(n) = A108299(n+3,4) = -A108299(n+4,5). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jun 01 2005
a(n) = A111808(n,2) for n > 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 17 2005
a(n)*a(n+1) = A006011(n+1) = (n+1)^2*(n^2+2)/4 = 3*A002415(n+1) = 1/2*a(n^2+2*n). a(n-1)*a(n) = (1/2)*a(n^2-1). - Alexander Adamchuk, Apr 13 2006 [Corrected and edited by Charlie Marion, Nov 26 2010]
a(n) = floor((2*n+1)^2/8). - Paul Barry, May 29 2006
For positive n, we have a(8*a(n))/a(n) = 4*(2*n+1)^2 = (4*n+2)^2, i.e., a(A033996(n))/a(n) = 4*A016754(n) = (A016825(n))^2 = A016826(n). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jul 29 2006
a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = a((n+1)^2) [R B Nelsen, Math Mag 70 (2) (1997), p. 130]. - R. J. Mathar, Nov 22 2006
a(n) = A126890(n,0). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 30 2006
a(n)*a(n+k)+a(n+1)*a(n+1+k) = a((n+1)*(n+1+k)). Generalizes previous formula dated Nov 22 2006 [and comments by J. M. Bergot dated May 22 2012]. - Charlie Marion, Feb 04 2011
(sqrt(8*a(n)+1)-1)/2 = n. - David W. Cantrell (DWCantrell(AT)sigmaxi.net), Feb 26 2007
a(n) = A023896(n) + A067392(n). - Lekraj Beedassy, Mar 02 2007
Sum_{k=0..n} a(k)*A039599(n,k) = A002457(n-1), for n >= 1. - Philippe Deléham, Jun 10 2007
8*a(n)^3 + a(n)^2 = Y(n)^2, where Y(n) = n*(n+1)*(2*n+1)/2 = 3*A000330(n). - Mohamed Bouhamida, Nov 06 2007 [Edited by Derek Orr, May 05 2015]
A general formula for polygonal numbers is P(k,n) = (k-2)*(n-1)n/2 + n = n + (k-2)*A000217(n-1), for n >= 1, k >= 3. - Omar E. Pol, Apr 28 2008 and Mar 31 2013
a(3*n) = A081266(n), a(4*n) = A033585(n), a(5*n) = A144312(n), a(6*n) = A144314(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 17 2008
a(n) = A022264(n) - A049450(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 09 2008
If we define f(n,i,a) = Sum_{j=0..k-1} (binomial(n,k)*Stirling1(n-k,i)*Product_{j=0..k-1} (-a-j)), then a(n) = -f(n,n-1,1), for n >= 1. - Milan Janjic, Dec 20 2008
4*a(x) + 4*a(y) + 1 = (x+y+1)^2 + (x-y)^2. - Vladimir Shevelev, Jan 21 2009
a(n) = A000124(n-1) + n-1 for n >= 2. a(n) = A000124(n) - 1. - Jaroslav Krizek, Jun 16 2009
An exponential generating function for the inverse of this sequence is given by Sum_{m>=0} ((Pochhammer(1, m)*Pochhammer(1, m))*x^m/(Pochhammer(3, m)*factorial(m))) = ((2-2*x)*log(1-x)+2*x)/x^2, the n-th derivative of which has a closed form which must be evaluated by taking the limit as x->0. A000217(n+1) = (lim_{x->0} d^n/dx^n (((2-2*x)*log(1-x)+2*x)/x^2))^-1 = (lim_{x->0} (2*Gamma(n)*(-1/x)^n*(n*(x/(-1+x))^n*(-x+1+n)*LerchPhi(x/(-1+x), 1, n) + (-1+x)*(n+1)*(x/(-1+x))^n + n*(log(1-x)+log(-1/(-1+x)))*(-x+1+n))/x^2))^-1. - Stephen Crowley, Jun 28 2009
a(n) = A034856(n+1) - A005408(n) = A005843(n) + A000124(n) - A005408(n). - Jaroslav Krizek, Sep 05 2009
a(A006894(n)) = a(A072638(n-1)+1) = A072638(n) = A006894(n+1)-1 for n >= 1. For n=4, a(11) = 66. - Jaroslav Krizek, Sep 12 2009
With offset 1, a(n) = floor(n^3/(n+1))/2. - Gary Detlefs, Feb 14 2010
a(n) = 4*a(floor(n/2)) + (-1)^(n+1)*floor((n+1)/2). - Bruno Berselli, May 23 2010
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3); a(0)=0, a(1)=1. - Mark Dols, Aug 20 2010
From Charlie Marion, Oct 15 2010: (Start)
a(n) + 2*a(n-1) + a(n-2) = n^2 + (n-1)^2; and
a(n) + 3*a(n-1) + 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3) = n^2 + 2*(n-1)^2 + (n-2)^2.
In general, for n >= m > 2, Sum_{k=0..m} binomial(m,m-k)*a(n-k) = Sum_{k=0..m-1} binomial(m-1,m-1-k)*(n-k)^2.
a(n) - 2*a(n-1) + a(n-2) = 1, a(n) - 3*a(n-1) + 3*a(n-2) - a(n-3) = 0 and a(n) - 4*a(n-1) + 6*a(n-2) - 4*(a-3) + a(n-4) = 0.
In general, for n >= m > 2, Sum_{k=0..m} (-1)^k*binomial(m,m-k)*a(n-k) = 0.
(End)
a(n) = sqrt(A000537(n)). - Zak Seidov, Dec 07 2010
For n > 0, a(n) = 1/(Integral_{x=0..Pi/2} 4*(sin(x))^(2*n-1)*(cos(x))^3). - Francesco Daddi, Aug 02 2011
a(n) = A110654(n)*A008619(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 24 2011
a(2*k-1) = A000384(k), a(2*k) = A014105(k), k > 0. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 13 2011
a(n) = A026741(n)*A026741(n+1). - Charles R Greathouse IV, Apr 01 2012
a(n) + a(a(n)) + 1 = a(a(n)+1). - J. M. Bergot, Apr 27 2012
a(n) = -s(n+1,n), where s(n,k) are the Stirling numbers of the first kind, A048994. - Mircea Merca, May 03 2012
a(n)*a(n+1) = a(Sum_{m=1..n} A005408(m))/2, for n >= 1. For example, if n=8, then a(8)*a(9) = a(80)/2 = 1620. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, May 27 2012
a(n) = A002378(n)/2 = (A001318(n) + A085787(n))/2. - Omar E. Pol, Jan 11 2013
G.f.: x * (1 + 3x + 6x^2 + ...) = x * Product_{j>=0} (1+x^(2^j))^3 = x * A(x) * A(x^2) * A(x^4) * ..., where A(x) = (1 + 3x + 3x^2 + x^3). - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 26 2012
G.f.: G(0) where G(k) = 1 + (2*k+3)*x/(2*k+1 - x*(k+2)*(2*k+1)/(x*(k+2) + (k+1)/G(k+1))); (continued fraction, 3rd kind, 3-step). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Nov 23 2012
a(n) = A002088(n) + A063985(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 21 2013
G.f.: x + 3*x^2/(Q(0)-3*x) where Q(k) = 1 + k*(x+1) + 3*x - x*(k+1)*(k+4)/Q(k+1); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Mar 14 2013
a(n) + a(n+1) + a(n+2) + a(n+3) + n = a(2*n+4). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Mar 16 2013
a(n) + a(n+1) + ... + a(n+8) + 6*n = a(3*n+15). - Charlie Marion, Mar 18 2013
a(n) + a(n+1) + ... + a(n+20) + 2*n^2 + 57*n = a(5*n+55). - Charlie Marion, Mar 18 2013
3*a(n) + a(n-1) = a(2*n), for n > 0. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 05 2013
In general, a(k*n) = (2*k-1)*a(n) + a((k-1)*n-1). - Charlie Marion, Apr 20 2015
Also, a(k*n) = a(k)*a(n) + a(k-1)*a(n-1). - Robert Israel, Apr 20 2015
a(n+1) = det(binomial(i+2,j+1), 1 <= i,j <= n). - Mircea Merca, Apr 06 2013
a(n) = floor(n/2) + ceiling(n^2/2) = n - floor(n/2) + floor(n^2/2). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 15 2013
a(n) = floor((n+1)/(exp(2/(n+1))-1)). - Richard R. Forberg, Jun 22 2013
Sum_{n>=1} a(n)/n! = 3*exp(1)/2 by the e.g.f. Also see A067764 regarding ratios calculated this way for binomial coefficients in general. - Richard R. Forberg, Jul 15 2013
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 4*log(2) - 2 = 0.7725887... . - Richard R. Forberg, Aug 11 2014
2/(Sum_{n>=m} 1/a(n)) = m, for m > 0. - Richard R. Forberg, Aug 12 2014
A228474(a(n))=n; A248952(a(n))=0; A248953(a(n))=a(n); A248961(a(n))=A000330(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 20 2014
a(a(n)-1) + a(a(n+2)-1) + 1 = A000124(n+1)^2. - Charlie Marion, Nov 04 2014
a(n) = 2*A000292(n) - A000330(n). - Luciano Ancora, Mar 14 2015
a(n) = A007494(n-1) + A099392(n) for n > 0. - Bui Quang Tuan, Mar 27 2015
Sum_{k=0..n} k*a(k+1) = a(A000096(n+1)). - Charlie Marion, Jul 15 2015
Let O(n) be the oblong number n(n+1) = A002378(n) and S(n) the square number n^2 = A000290(n). Then a(n) + a(n+2k) = O(n+k) + S(k) and a(n) + a(n+2k+1) = S(n+k+1) + O(k). - Charlie Marion, Jul 16 2015
A generalization of the Nov 22 2006 formula, a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = a((n+1)^2), follows. Let T(k,n) = a(n) + k. Then for all k, T(k,n)^2 + T(k,n+1)^2 = T(k,(n+1)^2 + 2*k) - 2*k. - Charlie Marion, Dec 10 2015
a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = a(a(n) + a(n+1)). Deducible from N. J. A. Sloane's a(n) + a(n+1) = (n+1)^2 and R. B. Nelson's a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = a((n+1)^2). - Ben Paul Thurston, Dec 28 2015
Dirichlet g.f.: (zeta(s-2) + zeta(s-1))/2. - Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jun 26 2016
a(n)^2 - a(n-1)^2 = n^3. - Miquel Cerda, Jun 29 2016
a(n) = A080851(0,n-1). - R. J. Mathar, Jul 28 2016
a(n) = A000290(n-1) - A034856(n-4). - Peter M. Chema, Sep 25 2016
a(n)^2 + a(n+3)^2 + 19 = a(n^2 + 4*n + 10). - Charlie Marion, Nov 23 2016
2*a(n)^2 + a(n) = a(n^2+n). - Charlie Marion, Nov 29 2016
G.f.: x/(1-x)^3 = (x * r(x) * r(x^3) * r(x^9) * r(x^27) * ...), where r(x) = (1 + x + x^2)^3 = (1 + 3*x + 6*x^2 + 7*x^3 + 6*x^4 + 3*x^5 + x^6). - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 03 2016
a(n) = sum of the elements of inverse of matrix Q(n), where Q(n) has elements q_i,j = 1/(1-4*(i-j)^2). So if e = appropriately sized vector consisting of 1's, then a(n) = e'.Q(n)^-1.e. - Michael Yukish, Mar 20 2017
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} ((2*k-1)!!*(2*n-2*k-1)!!)/((2*k-2)!!*(2*n-2*k)!!). - Michael Yukish, Mar 20 2017
Sum_{i=0..k-1} a(n+i) = (3*k*n^2 + 3*n*k^2 + k^3 - k)/6. - Christopher Hohl, Feb 23 2019
a(n) = A060544(n + 1) - A016754(n). - Ralf Steiner, Nov 09 2019
a(n) == 0 (mod n) iff n is odd (see De Koninck reference). - Bernard Schott, Jan 10 2020
8*a(k)*a(n) + ((a(k)-1)*n + a(k))^2 = ((a(k)+1)*n + a(k))^2. This formula reduces to the well-known formula, 8*a(n) + 1 = (2*n+1)^2, when k = 1. - Charlie Marion, Jul 23 2020
a(k)*a(n) = Sum_{i = 0..k-1} (-1)^i*a((k-i)*(n-i)). - Charlie Marion, Dec 04 2020
From Amiram Eldar, Jan 20 2021: (Start)
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = cosh(sqrt(7)*Pi/2)/(2*Pi).
Product_{n>=2} (1 - 1/a(n)) = 1/3. (End)
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..2*n-1} (-1)^(k+1)*a(k)*a(2*n-k). For example, for n = 4, 1*28 - 3*21 + 6*15 - 10*10 + 15*6 - 21*3 + 28*1 = 10. - Charlie Marion, Mar 23 2022
2*a(n) = A000384(n) - n^2 + 2*n. In general, if P(k,n) = the n-th k-gonal number, then (j+1)*a(n) = P(5 + j, n) - n^2 + (j+1)*n. More generally, (j+1)*P(k,n) = P(2*k + (k-2)*(j-1),n) - n^2 + (j+1)*n. - Charlie Marion, Mar 14 2023
a(n) = A109613(n) * A004526(n+1). - Torlach Rush, Nov 10 2023
a(n) = (1/6)* Sum_{k = 0..3*n} (-1)^(n+k+1) * k*(k + 1) * binomial(3*n+k, 2*k). - Peter Bala, Nov 03 2024
From Peter Bala, Jul 05 2025: (Start)
The following series telescope: for k >= 0,
Sum_{n >= 1} a(n)*a(n+2)*...*a(n+2*k)/(a(n+1)*a(n+3)*...*a(n+2*k+3)) = 1/(2*k + 3);
Sum_{n >= 1} a(n+1)*a(n+3)*...*a(n+2*k+1)/(a(n)*a(n+2)*...*a(n+2*k+2)) = 2/(2*k + 3) * Sum_{i = 1..2*k+3} 1/i. (End)

Extensions

Edited by Derek Orr, May 05 2015

A002378 Oblong (or promic, pronic, or heteromecic) numbers: a(n) = n*(n+1).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, 42, 56, 72, 90, 110, 132, 156, 182, 210, 240, 272, 306, 342, 380, 420, 462, 506, 552, 600, 650, 702, 756, 812, 870, 930, 992, 1056, 1122, 1190, 1260, 1332, 1406, 1482, 1560, 1640, 1722, 1806, 1892, 1980, 2070, 2162, 2256, 2352, 2450, 2550
Offset: 0

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4*a(n) + 1 are the odd squares A016754(n).
The word "pronic" (used by Dickson) is incorrect. - Michael Somos
According to the 2nd edition of Webster, the correct word is "promic". - R. K. Guy
a(n) is the number of minimal vectors in the root lattice A_n (see Conway and Sloane, p. 109).
Let M_n denote the n X n matrix M_n(i, j) = (i + j); then the characteristic polynomial of M_n is x^(n-2) * (x^2 - a(n)*x - A002415(n)). - Benoit Cloitre, Nov 09 2002
The greatest LCM of all pairs (j, k) for j < k <= n for n > 1. - Robert G. Wilson v, Jun 19 2004
First differences are a(n+1) - a(n) = 2*n + 2 = 2, 4, 6, ... (while first differences of the squares are (n+1)^2 - n^2 = 2*n + 1 = 1, 3, 5, ...). - Alexandre Wajnberg, Dec 29 2005
25 appended to these numbers corresponds to squares of numbers ending in 5 (i.e., to squares of A017329). - Lekraj Beedassy, Mar 24 2006
A rapid (mental) multiplication/factorization technique -- a generalization of Lekraj Beedassy's comment: For all bases b >= 2 and positive integers n, c, d, k with c + d = b^k, we have (n*b^k + c)*(n*b^k + d) = a(n)*b^(2*k) + c*d. Thus the last 2*k base-b digits of the product are exactly those of c*d -- including leading 0(s) as necessary -- with the preceding base-b digit(s) the same as a(n)'s. Examples: In decimal, 113*117 = 13221 (as n = 11, b = 10 = 3 + 7, k = 1, 3*7 = 21, and a(11) = 132); in octal, 61*67 = 5207 (52 is a(6) in octal). In particular, for even b = 2*m (m > 0) and c = d = m, such a product is a square of this type. Decimal factoring: 5609 is immediately seen to be 71*79. Likewise, 120099 = 301*399 (k = 2 here) and 99990000001996 = 9999002*9999998 (k = 3). - Rick L. Shepherd, Jul 24 2021
Number of circular binary words of length n + 1 having exactly one occurrence of 01. Example: a(2) = 6 because we have 001, 010, 011, 100, 101 and 110. Column 1 of A119462. - Emeric Deutsch, May 21 2006
The sequence of iterated square roots sqrt(N + sqrt(N + ...)) has for N = 1, 2, ... the limit (1 + sqrt(1 + 4*N))/2. For N = a(n) this limit is n + 1, n = 1, 2, .... For all other numbers N, N >= 1, this limit is not a natural number. Examples: n = 1, a(1) = 2: sqrt(2 + sqrt(2 + ...)) = 1 + 1 = 2; n = 2, a(2) = 6: sqrt(6 + sqrt(6 + ...)) = 1 + 2 = 3. - Wolfdieter Lang, May 05 2006
Nonsquare integers m divisible by ceiling(sqrt(m)), except for m = 0. - Max Alekseyev, Nov 27 2006
The number of off-diagonal elements of an (n + 1) X (n + 1) matrix. - Artur Jasinski, Jan 11 2007
a(n) is equal to the number of functions f:{1, 2} -> {1, 2, ..., n + 1} such that for a fixed x in {1, 2} and a fixed y in {1, 2, ..., n + 1} we have f(x) <> y. - Aleksandar M. Janjic and Milan Janjic, Mar 13 2007
Numbers m >= 0 such that round(sqrt(m+1)) - round(sqrt(m)) = 1. - Hieronymus Fischer, Aug 06 2007
Numbers m >= 0 such that ceiling(2*sqrt(m+1)) - 1 = 1 + floor(2*sqrt(m)). - Hieronymus Fischer, Aug 06 2007
Numbers m >= 0 such that fract(sqrt(m+1)) > 1/2 and fract(sqrt(m)) < 1/2 where fract(x) is the fractional part (fract(x) = x - floor(x), x >= 0). - Hieronymus Fischer, Aug 06 2007
X values of solutions to the equation 4*X^3 + X^2 = Y^2. To find Y values: b(n) = n(n+1)(2n+1). - Mohamed Bouhamida, Nov 06 2007
Nonvanishing diagonal of A132792, the infinitesimal Lah matrix, so "generalized factorials" composed of a(n) are given by the elements of the Lah matrix, unsigned A111596, e.g., a(1)*a(2)*a(3) / 3! = -A111596(4,1) = 24. - Tom Copeland, Nov 20 2007
If Y is a 2-subset of an n-set X then, for n >= 2, a(n-2) is the number of 2-subsets and 3-subsets of X having exactly one element in common with Y. - Milan Janjic, Dec 28 2007
a(n) coincides with the vertex of a parabola of even width in the Redheffer matrix, directed toward zero. An integer p is prime if and only if for all integer k, the parabola y = kx - x^2 has no integer solution with 1 < x < k when y = p; a(n) corresponds to odd k. - Reikku Kulon, Nov 30 2008
The third differences of certain values of the hypergeometric function 3F2 lead to the squares of the oblong numbers i.e., 3F2([1, n + 1, n + 1], [n + 2, n + 2], z = 1) - 3*3F2([1, n + 2, n + 2], [n + 3, n + 3], z = 1) + 3*3F2([1, n + 3, n + 3], [n + 4, n + 4], z = 1) - 3F2([1, n + 4, n + 4], [n + 5, n + 5], z = 1) = (1/((n+2)*(n+3)))^2 for n = -1, 0, 1, 2, ... . See also A162990. - Johannes W. Meijer, Jul 21 2009
Generalized factorials, [a.(n!)] = a(n)*a(n-1)*...*a(0) = A010790(n), with a(0) = 1 are related to A001263. - Tom Copeland, Sep 21 2011
For n > 1, a(n) is the number of functions f:{1, 2} -> {1, ..., n + 2} where f(1) > 1 and f(2) > 2. Note that there are n + 1 possible values for f(1) and n possible values for f(2). For example, a(3) = 12 since there are 12 functions f from {1, 2} to {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} with f(1) > 1 and f(2) > 2. - Dennis P. Walsh, Dec 24 2011
a(n) gives the number of (n + 1) X (n + 1) symmetric (0, 1)-matrices containing two ones (see [Cameron]). - L. Edson Jeffery, Feb 18 2012
a(n) is the number of positions of a domino in a rectangled triangular board with both legs equal to n + 1. - César Eliud Lozada, Sep 26 2012
a(n) is the number of ordered pairs (x, y) in [n+2] X [n+2] with |x-y| > 1. - Dennis P. Walsh, Nov 27 2012
a(n) is the number of injective functions from {1, 2} into {1, 2, ..., n + 1}. - Dennis P. Walsh, Nov 27 2012
a(n) is the sum of the positive differences of the partition parts of 2n + 2 into exactly two parts (see example). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 02 2013
a(n)/a(n-1) is asymptotic to e^(2/n). - Richard R. Forberg, Jun 22 2013
Number of positive roots in the root system of type D_{n + 1} (for n > 2). - Tom Edgar, Nov 05 2013
Number of roots in the root system of type A_n (for n > 0). - Tom Edgar, Nov 05 2013
From Felix P. Muga II, Mar 18 2014: (Start)
a(m), for m >= 1, are the only positive integer values t for which the Binet-de Moivre formula for the recurrence b(n) = b(n-1) + t*b(n-2) with b(0) = 0 and b(1) = 1 has a root of a square. PROOF (as suggested by Wolfdieter Lang, Mar 26 2014): The sqrt(1 + 4t) appearing in the zeros r1 and r2 of the characteristic equation is (a positive) integer for positive integer t precisely if 4t + 1 = (2m + 1)^2, that is t = a(m), m >= 1. Thus, the characteristic roots are integers: r1 = m + 1 and r2 = -m.
Let m > 1 be an integer. If b(n) = b(n-1) + a(m)*b(n-2), n >= 2, b(0) = 0, b(1) = 1, then lim_{n->oo} b(n+1)/b(n) = m + 1. (End)
Cf. A130534 for relations to colored forests, disposition of flags on flagpoles, and colorings of the vertices (chromatic polynomial) of the complete graphs (here simply K_2). - Tom Copeland, Apr 05 2014
The set of integers k for which k + sqrt(k + sqrt(k + sqrt(k + sqrt(k + ...) ... is an integer. - Leslie Koller, Apr 11 2014
a(n-1) is the largest number k such that (n*k)/(n+k) is an integer. - Derek Orr, May 22 2014
Number of ways to place a domino and a singleton on a strip of length n - 2. - Ralf Stephan, Jun 09 2014
With offset 1, this appears to give the maximal number of crossings between n nonconcentric circles of equal radius. - Felix Fröhlich, Jul 14 2014
For n > 1, the harmonic mean of the n values a(1) to a(n) is n + 1. The lowest infinite sequence of increasing positive integers whose cumulative harmonic mean is integral. - Ian Duff, Feb 01 2015
a(n) is the maximum number of queens of one color that can coexist without attacking one queen of the opponent's color on an (n+2) X (n+2) chessboard. The lone queen can be placed in any position on the perimeter of the board. - Bob Selcoe, Feb 07 2015
With a(0) = 1, a(n-1) is the smallest positive number not in the sequence such that Sum_{i = 1..n} 1/a(i-1) has a denominator equal to n. - Derek Orr, Jun 17 2015
The positive members of this sequence are a proper subsequence of the so-called 1-happy couple products A007969. See the W. Lang link there, eq. (4), with Y_0 = 1, with a table at the end. - Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 19 2015
For n > 0, a(n) is the reciprocal of the area bounded above by y = x^(n-1) and below by y = x^n for x in the interval [0, 1]. Summing all such areas visually demonstrates the formula below giving Sum_{n >= 1} 1/a(n) = 1. - Rick L. Shepherd, Oct 26 2015
It appears that, except for a(0) = 0, this is the set of positive integers n such that x*floor(x) = n has no solution. (For example, to get 3, take x = -3/2.) - Melvin Peralta, Apr 14 2016
If two independent real random variables, x and y, are distributed according to the same exponential distribution: pdf(x) = lambda * exp(-lambda * x), lambda > 0, then the probability that n - 1 <= x/y < n is given by 1/a(n). - Andres Cicuttin, Dec 03 2016
a(n) is equal to the sum of all possible differences between n different pairs of consecutive odd numbers (see example). - Miquel Cerda, Dec 04 2016
a(n+1) is the dimension of the space of vector fields in the plane with polynomial coefficients up to order n. - Martin Licht, Dec 04 2016
It appears that a(n) + 3 is the area of the largest possible pond in a square (A268311). - Craig Knecht, May 04 2017
Also the number of 3-cycles in the (n+3)-triangular honeycomb acute knight graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Jul 27 2017
Also the Wiener index of the (n+2)-wheel graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 08 2017
The left edge of a Floyd's triangle that consists of even numbers: 0; 2, 4; 6, 8, 10; 12, 14, 16, 18; 20, 22, 24, 26, 28; ... giving 0, 2, 6, 12, 20, ... The right edge generates A028552. - Waldemar Puszkarz, Feb 02 2018
a(n+1) is the order of rowmotion on a poset obtained by adjoining a unique minimal (or maximal) element to a disjoint union of at least two chains of n elements. - Nick Mayers, Jun 01 2018
From Juhani Heino, Feb 05 2019: (Start)
For n > 0, 1/a(n) = n/(n+1) - (n-1)/n.
For example, 1/6 = 2/3 - 1/2; 1/12 = 3/4 - 2/3.
Corollary of this:
Take 1/2 pill.
Next day, take 1/6 pill. 1/2 + 1/6 = 2/3, so your daily average is 1/3.
Next day, take 1/12 pill. 2/3 + 1/12 = 3/4, so your daily average is 1/4.
And so on. (End)
From Bernard Schott, May 22 2020: (Start)
For an oblong number m >= 6 there exists a Euclidean division m = d*q + r with q < r < d which are in geometric progression, in this order, with a common integer ratio b. For b >= 2 and q >= 1, the Euclidean division is m = qb*(qb+1) = qb^2 * q + qb where (q, qb, qb^2) are in geometric progression.
Some examples with distinct ratios and quotients:
6 | 4 30 | 25 42 | 18
----- ----- -----
2 | 1 , 5 | 1 , 6 | 2 ,
and also:
42 | 12 420 | 100
----- -----
6 | 3 , 20 | 4 .
Some oblong numbers also satisfy a Euclidean division m = d*q + r with q < r < d that are in geometric progression in this order but with a common noninteger ratio b > 1 (see A335064). (End)
For n >= 1, the continued fraction expansion of sqrt(a(n)) is [n; {2, 2n}]. For n=1, this collapses to [1; {2}]. - Magus K. Chu, Sep 09 2022
a(n-2) is the maximum irregularity over all trees with n vertices. The extremal graphs are stars. (The irregularity of a graph is the sum of the differences between the degrees over all edges of the graph.) - Allan Bickle, May 29 2023
For n > 0, number of diagonals in a regular 2*(n+1)-gon that are not parallel to any edge (cf. A367204). - Paolo Xausa, Mar 30 2024
a(n-1) is the maximum Zagreb index over all trees with n vertices. The extremal graphs are stars. (The Zagreb index of a graph is the sum of the squares of the degrees over all vertices of the graph.) - Allan Bickle, Apr 11 2024
For n >= 1, a(n) is the determinant of the distance matrix of a cycle graph on 2*n + 1 vertices (if the length of the cycle is even such a determinant is zero). - Miquel A. Fiol, Aug 20 2024
For n > 1, the continued fraction expansion of sqrt(16*a(n)) is [2n+1; {1, 2n-1, 1, 8n+2}]. - Magus K. Chu, Nov 20 2024
For n>=2, a(n) is the number of faces on a n+1-zone rhombic zonohedron. Each pair of a collection of great circles on a sphere intersects at two points, so there are 2*binomial(n+1,2) intersections. The dual of the implied polyhedron is a rhombic zonohedron, its faces corresponding to the intersections. - Shel Kaphan, Aug 12 2025

Examples

			a(3) = 12, since 2(3)+2 = 8 has 4 partitions with exactly two parts: (7,1), (6,2), (5,3), (4,4). Taking the positive differences of the parts in each partition and adding, we get: 6 + 4 + 2 + 0 = 12. - _Wesley Ivan Hurt_, Jun 02 2013
G.f. = 2*x + 6*x^2 + 12*x^3 + 20*x^4 + 30*x^5 + 42*x^6 + 56*x^7 + ... - _Michael Somos_, May 22 2014
From _Miquel Cerda_, Dec 04 2016: (Start)
a(1) = 2, since 45-43 = 2;
a(2) = 6, since 47-45 = 2 and 47-43 = 4, then 2+4 = 6;
a(3) = 12, since 49-47 = 2, 49-45 = 4, and 49-43 = 6, then 2+4+6 = 12. (End)
		

References

  • W. W. Berman and D. E. Smith, A Brief History of Mathematics, 1910, Open Court, page 67.
  • J. H. Conway and R. K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, 1996, p. 34.
  • J. H. Conway and N. J. A. Sloane, "Sphere Packings, Lattices and Groups", Springer-Verlag.
  • L. E. Dickson, History of the Theory of Numbers, Vol. 1: Divisibility and Primality. New York: Chelsea, p. 357, 1952.
  • L. E. Dickson, History of the Theory of Numbers, Vol. 2: Diophantine Analysis. New York: Chelsea, pp. 6, 232-233, 350 and 407, 1952.
  • H. Eves, An Introduction to the History of Mathematics, revised, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1964, page 72.
  • Nicomachus of Gerasa, Introduction to Arithmetic, translation by Martin Luther D'Ooge, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1938, p. 254.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §8.6 Figurate Numbers, p. 291.
  • Granino A. Korn and Theresa M. Korn, Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York (1968), pp. 980-981.
  • C. S. Ogilvy and J. T. Anderson, Excursions in Number Theory, Oxford University Press, 1966, pp. 61-62.
  • Alfred S. Posamentier, Math Charmers, Tantalizing Tidbits for the Mind, Prometheus Books, NY, 2003, pages 54-55.
  • 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).
  • F. J. Swetz, From Five Fingers to Infinity, Open Court, 1994, p. 219.
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pages 2-6.

Crossrefs

Partial sums of A005843 (even numbers). Twice triangular numbers (A000217).
1/beta(n, 2) in A061928.
A036689 and A036690 are subsequences. Cf. numbers of the form n*(n*k-k+4)/2 listed in A226488. - Bruno Berselli, Jun 10 2013
Row n=2 of A185651.
Cf. A007745, A169810, A213541, A005369 (characteristic function).
Cf. A281026. - Bruno Berselli, Jan 16 2017
Cf. A045943 (4-cycles in triangular honeycomb acute knight graph), A028896 (5-cycles), A152773 (6-cycles).
Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.
A335064 is a subsequence.
Second column of A003506.
Cf. A002378, A046092, A028896 (irregularities of maximal k-degenerate graphs).
Cf. A347213 (Dgf at s=4).
Cf. A002378, A152811, A371912 (Zagreb indices of maximal k-degenerate graphs).

Programs

Formula

G.f.: 2*x/(1-x)^3. - Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation.
a(n) = a(n-1) + 2*n, a(0) = 0.
Sum_{n >= 1} a(n) = n*(n+1)*(n+2)/3 (cf. A007290, partial sums).
Sum_{n >= 1} 1/a(n) = 1. (Cf. Tijdeman)
Sum_{n >= 1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = log(4) - 1 = A016627 - 1 [Jolley eq (235)].
1 = 1/2 + Sum_{n >= 1} 1/(2*a(n)) = 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/12 + 1/24 + 1/40 + 1/60 + ... with partial sums: 1/2, 3/4, 5/6, 7/8, 9/10, 11/12, 13/14, ... - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 16 2003
a(n)*a(n+1) = a(n*(n+2)); e.g., a(3)*a(4) = 12*20 = 240 = a(3*5). - Charlie Marion, Dec 29 2003
Sum_{k = 1..n} 1/a(k) = n/(n+1). - Robert G. Wilson v, Feb 04 2005
a(n) = A046092(n)/2. - Zerinvary Lajos, Jan 08 2006
Log 2 = Sum_{n >= 0} 1/a(2n+1) = 1/2 + 1/12 + 1/30 + 1/56 + 1/90 + ... = (1 - 1/2) + (1/3 - 1/4) + (1/5 - 1/6) + (1/7 - 1/8) + ... = Sum_{n >= 0} (-1)^n/(n+1) = A002162. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 22 2003
a(n) = A110660(2*n). - N. J. A. Sloane, Sep 21 2005
a(n-1) = n^2 - n = A000290(n) - A000027(n) for n >= 1. a(n) is the inverse (frequency distribution) sequence of A000194(n). - Mohammad K. Azarian, Jul 26 2007
(2, 6, 12, 20, 30, ...) = binomial transform of (2, 4, 2). - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 28 2007
a(n) = 2*Sum_{i=0..n} i = 2*A000217(n). - Artur Jasinski, Jan 09 2007, and Omar E. Pol, May 14 2008
a(n) = A006503(n) - A000292(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 24 2008
a(n) = A061037(4*n) = (n+1/2)^2 - 1/4 = ((2n+1)^2 - 1)/4 = (A005408(n)^2 - 1)/4. - Paul Curtz, Oct 03 2008 and Klaus Purath, Jan 13 2022
a(0) = 0, a(n) = a(n-1) + 1 + floor(x), where x is the minimal positive solution to fract(sqrt(a(n-1) + 1 + x)) = 1/2. - Hieronymus Fischer, Dec 31 2008
E.g.f.: (x+2)*x*exp(x). - Geoffrey Critzer, Feb 06 2009
Product_{i >= 2} (1-1/a(i)) = -2*sin(Pi*A001622)/Pi = -2*sin(A094886)/A000796 = 2*A146481. - R. J. Mathar, Mar 12 2009, Mar 15 2009
E.g.f.: ((-x+1)*log(-x+1)+x)/x^2 also Integral_{x = 0..1} ((-x+1)*log(-x+1) + x)/x^2 = zeta(2) - 1. - Stephen Crowley, Jul 11 2009
a(A007018(n)) = A007018(n+1), i.e., A007018(n+1) = A007018(n)-th oblong numbers. - Jaroslav Krizek, Sep 13 2009
a(n) = floor((n + 1/2)^2). a(n) = A035608(n) + A004526(n+1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 27 2010
a(n) = 2*(2*A006578(n) - A035608(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 07 2010
a(n-1) = floor(n^5/(n^3 + n^2 + 1)). - Gary Detlefs, Feb 11 2010
For n > 1: a(n) = A173333(n+1, n-1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 19 2010
a(n) = A004202(A000217(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 12 2011
a(n) = A188652(2*n+1) + 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 13 2011
For n > 0 a(n) = 1/(Integral_{x=0..Pi/2} 2*(sin(x))^(2*n-1)*(cos(x))^3). - Francesco Daddi, Aug 02 2011
a(n) = A002061(n+1) - 1. - Omar E. Pol, Oct 03 2011
a(0) = 0, a(n) = A005408(A034856(n)) - A005408(n-1). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Dec 06 2012
a(n) = A005408(A000096(n)) - A005408(n). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Dec 07 2012
a(n) = A001318(n) + A085787(n). - Omar E. Pol, Jan 11 2013
Sum_{n >= 1} 1/(a(n))^(2s) = Sum_{t = 1..2*s} binomial(4*s - t - 1, 2*s - 1) * ( (1 + (-1)^t)*zeta(t) - 1). See Arxiv:1301.6293. - R. J. Mathar, Feb 03 2013
a(n)^2 + a(n+1)^2 = 2 * a((n+1)^2), for n > 0. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 08 2013
a(n) = floor(n^2 * e^(1/n)) and a(n-1) = floor(n^2 / e^(1/n)). - Richard R. Forberg, Jun 22 2013
a(n) = 2*C(n+1, 2), for n >= 0. - Felix P. Muga II, Mar 11 2014
A005369(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 05 2014
Binomial transform of [0, 2, 2, 0, 0, 0, ...]. - Alois P. Heinz, Mar 10 2015
a(2n) = A002943(n) for n >= 0, a(2n-1) = A002939(n) for n >= 1. - M. F. Hasler, Oct 11 2015
For n > 0, a(n) = 1/(Integral_{x=0..1} (x^(n-1) - x^n) dx). - Rick L. Shepherd, Oct 26 2015
a(n) = A005902(n) - A007588(n). - Peter M. Chema, Jan 09 2016
For n > 0, a(n) = lim_{m -> oo} (1/m)*1/(Sum_{i=m*n..m*(n+1)} 1/i^2), with error of ~1/m. - Richard R. Forberg, Jul 27 2016
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jul 28 2016: (Start)
Dirichlet g.f.: zeta(s-2) + zeta(s-1).
Convolution of nonnegative integers (A001477) and constant sequence (A007395).
Sum_{n >= 0} a(n)/n! = 3*exp(1). (End)
From Charlie Marion, Mar 06 2020: (Start)
a(n)*a(n+2k-1) + (n+k)^2 = ((2n+1)*k + n^2)^2.
a(n)*a(n+2k) + k^2 = ((2n+1)*k + a(n))^2. (End)
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = cosh(sqrt(3)*Pi/2)/Pi. - Amiram Eldar, Jan 20 2021
A generalization of the Dec 29 2003 formula, a(n)*a(n+1) = a(n*(n+2)), follows. a(n)*a(n+k) = a(n*(n+k+1)) + (k-1)*n*(n+k+1). - Charlie Marion, Jan 02 2023
a(n) = A016742(n) - A049450(n). - Leo Tavares, Mar 15 2025

Extensions

Additional comments from Michael Somos
Comment and cross-reference added by Christopher Hunt Gribble, Oct 13 2009

A000326 Pentagonal numbers: a(n) = n*(3*n-1)/2.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 5, 12, 22, 35, 51, 70, 92, 117, 145, 176, 210, 247, 287, 330, 376, 425, 477, 532, 590, 651, 715, 782, 852, 925, 1001, 1080, 1162, 1247, 1335, 1426, 1520, 1617, 1717, 1820, 1926, 2035, 2147, 2262, 2380, 2501, 2625, 2752, 2882, 3015, 3151
Offset: 0

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Comments

The average of the first n (n > 0) pentagonal numbers is the n-th triangular number. - Mario Catalani (mario.catalani(AT)unito.it), Apr 10 2003
a(n) is the sum of n integers starting from n, i.e., 1, 2 + 3, 3 + 4 + 5, 4 + 5 + 6 + 7, etc. - Jon Perry, Jan 15 2004
Partial sums of 1, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16, ... (1 mod 3), a(2k) = k(6k-1), a(2k-1) = (2k-1)(3k-2). - Jon Perry, Sep 10 2004
Starting with offset 1 = binomial transform of [1, 4, 3, 0, 0, 0, ...]. Also, A004736 * [1, 3, 3, 3, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Oct 25 2007
If Y is a 3-subset of an n-set X then, for n >= 4, a(n-3) is the number of 4-subsets of X having at least two elements in common with Y. - Milan Janjic, Nov 23 2007
Solutions to the duplication formula 2*a(n) = a(k) are given by the index pairs (n, k) = (5,7), (5577, 7887), (6435661, 9101399), etc. The indices are integer solutions to the pair of equations 2(6n-1)^2 = 1 + y^2, k = (1+y)/6, so these n can be generated from the subset of numbers [1+A001653(i)]/6, any i, where these are integers, confined to the cases where the associated k=[1+A002315(i)]/6 are also integers. - R. J. Mathar, Feb 01 2008
a(n) is a binomial coefficient C(n,4) (A000332) if and only if n is a generalized pentagonal number (A001318). Also see A145920. - Matthew Vandermast, Oct 28 2008
Even octagonal numbers divided by 8. - Omar E. Pol, Aug 18 2011
Sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 5, ... and the line from 1, in the direction 1, 12, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized pentagonal numbers A001318. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 08 2011
The hyper-Wiener index of the star-tree with n edges (see A196060, example). - Emeric Deutsch, Sep 30 2011
More generally the n-th k-gonal number is equal to n + (k-2)*A000217(n-1), n >= 1, k >= 3. In this case k = 5. - Omar E. Pol, Apr 06 2013
Note that both Euler's pentagonal theorem for the partition numbers and Euler's pentagonal theorem for the sum of divisors refer more exactly to the generalized pentagonal numbers, not this sequence. For more information see A001318, A175003, A238442. - Omar E. Pol, Mar 01 2014
The Fuss-Catalan numbers are Cat(d,k)= [1/(k*(d-1)+1)]*binomial(k*d,k) and enumerate the number of (d+1)-gon partitions of a (k*(d-1)+2)-gon (cf. Schuetz and Whieldon link). a(n)= Cat(n,3), so enumerates the number of (n+1)-gon partitions of a (3*(n-1)+2)-gon. Analogous sequences are A100157 (k=4) and A234043 (k=5). - Tom Copeland, Oct 05 2014
Binomial transform of (0, 1, 3, 0, 0, 0, ...) (A169585 with offset 1) and second partial sum of (0, 1, 3, 3, 3, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Oct 05 2015
For n > 0, a(n) is the number of compositions of n+8 into n parts avoiding parts 2 and 3. - Milan Janjic, Jan 07 2016
a(n) is also the number of edges in the Mycielskian of the complete graph K[n]. Indeed, K[n] has n vertices and n(n-1)/2 edges. Then its Mycielskian has n + 3n(n-1)/2 = n(3n-1)/2. See p. 205 of the West reference. - Emeric Deutsch, Nov 04 2016
Sum of the numbers from n to 2n-1. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Dec 03 2016
Also the number of maximal cliques in the n-Andrásfai graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Dec 01 2017
Coefficients in the hypergeometric series identity 1 - 5*(x - 1)/(2*x + 1) + 12*(x - 1)*(x - 2)/((2*x + 1)*(2*x + 2)) - 22*(x - 1)*(x - 2)*(x - 3)/((2*x + 1)*(2*x + 2)*(2*x + 3)) + ... = 0, valid for Re(x) > 1. Cf. A002412 and A002418. Column 2 of A103450. - Peter Bala, Mar 14 2019
A generalization of the Comment dated Apr 10 2003 follows. (k-3)*A000292(n-2) plus the average of the first n (2k-1)-gonal numbers is the n-th k-gonal number. - Charlie Marion, Nov 01 2020
a(n+1) is the number of Dyck paths of size (3,3n+1); i.e., the number of NE lattice paths from (0,0) to (3,3n+1) which stay above the line connecting these points. - Harry Richman, Jul 13 2021
a(n) is the largest sum of n positive integers x_1, ..., x_n such that x_i | x_(i+1)+1 for each 1 <= i <= n, where x_(n+1) = x_1. - Yifan Xie, Feb 21 2025

Examples

			Illustration of initial terms:
.
.                                       o
.                                     o o
.                          o        o o o
.                        o o      o o o o
.                o     o o o    o o o o o
.              o o   o o o o    o o o o o
.        o   o o o   o o o o    o o o o o
.      o o   o o o   o o o o    o o o o o
.  o   o o   o o o   o o o o    o o o o o
.
.  1    5     12       22           35
- _Philippe Deléham_, Mar 30 2013
		

References

  • Tom M. Apostol, Introduction to Analytic Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 1976, pages 2 and 311.
  • Raymond Ayoub, An Introduction to the Analytic Theory of Numbers, Amer. Math. Soc., 1963; p. 129.
  • Albert H. Beiler, Recreations in the Theory of Numbers, Dover, NY, 1964, p. 189.
  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 38, 40.
  • E. Deza and M. M. Deza, Figurate numbers, World Scientific Publishing (2012), page 6.
  • L. E. Dickson, History of the Theory of Numbers. Carnegie Institute Public. 256, Washington, DC, Vol. 1, 1919; Vol. 2, 1920; Vol. 3, 1923, see vol. 2, p. 1.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §8.6 Figurate Numbers, p. 291.
  • G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers. 3rd ed., Oxford Univ. Press, 1954, p. 284.
  • Clifford A. Pickover, A Passion for Mathematics, Wiley, 2005; see p. 64.
  • Alfred S. Posamentier, Math Charmers, Tantalizing Tidbits for the Mind, Prometheus Books, NY, 2003, pages 52-53, 129-130, 132.
  • 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 7-10.
  • André Weil, Number theory: an approach through history; from Hammurapi to Legendre, Birkhäuser, Boston, 1984; see p. 186.
  • David Wells, The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers, Penguin Books, 1987, pp. 98-100.
  • Douglas B. West, Introduction to Graph Theory, 2nd ed., Prentice-Hall, NJ, 2001.

Crossrefs

The generalized pentagonal numbers b*n+3*n*(n-1)/2, for b = 1 through 12, form sequences A000326, A005449, A045943, A115067, A140090, A140091, A059845, A140672, A140673, A140674, A140675, A151542.
Cf. A001318 (generalized pentagonal numbers), A049452, A033570, A010815, A034856, A051340, A004736, A033568, A049453, A002411 (partial sums), A033579.
See A220083 for a list of numbers of the form n*P(s,n)-(n-1)*P(s,n-1), where P(s,n) is the n-th polygonal number with s sides.
Cf. A240137: sum of n consecutive cubes starting from n^3.
Cf. similar sequences listed in A022288.
Partial sums of A016777.

Programs

  • GAP
    List([0..50],n->n*(3*n-1)/2); # Muniru A Asiru, Mar 18 2019
    
  • Haskell
    a000326 n = n * (3 * n - 1) `div` 2  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 07 2012
    
  • Magma
    [n*(3*n-1)/2 : n in [0..100]]; // Wesley Ivan Hurt, Oct 15 2015
    
  • Maple
    A000326 := n->n*(3*n-1)/2: seq(A000326(n), n=0..100);
    A000326:=-(1+2*z)/(z-1)**3; # Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
    a[0]:=0:a[1]:=1:for n from 2 to 50 do a[n]:=2*a[n-1]-a[n-2]+3 od: seq(a[n], n=0..50); # Miklos Kristof, Zerinvary Lajos, Feb 18 2008
  • Mathematica
    Table[n (3 n - 1)/2, {n, 0, 60}] (* Stefan Steinerberger, Apr 01 2006 *)
    Array[# (3 # - 1)/2 &, 47, 0] (* Zerinvary Lajos, Jul 10 2009 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{3, -3, 1}, {0, 1, 5}, 61] (* Harvey P. Dale, Dec 27 2011 *)
    pentQ[n_] := IntegerQ[(1 + Sqrt[24 n + 1])/6]; pentQ[0] = True; Select[Range[0, 3200], pentQ@# &] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Mar 31 2014 *)
    Join[{0}, Accumulate[Range[1, 312, 3]]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Mar 26 2016 *)
    (* For Mathematica 10.4+ *) Table[PolygonalNumber[RegularPolygon[5], n], {n, 0, 46}] (* Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Aug 27 2016 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[x (-1 - 2 x)/(-1 + x)^3, {x, 0, 20}], x] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Dec 01 2017 *)
    PolygonalNumber[5, Range[0, 20]] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Dec 01 2017 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=n*(3*n-1)/2
    
  • PARI
    vector(100, n, n--; binomial(3*n, 2)/3) \\ Altug Alkan, Oct 06 2015
    
  • PARI
    is_a000326(n) = my(s); n==0 || (issquare (24*n+1, &s) && s%6==5); \\ Hugo Pfoertner, Aug 03 2023
    
  • Python
    # Intended to compute the initial segment of the sequence, not isolated terms.
    def aList():
         x, y = 1, 1
         yield 0
         while True:
             yield x
             x, y = x + y + 3, y + 3
    A000326 = aList()
    print([next(A000326) for i in range(47)]) # Peter Luschny, Aug 04 2019

Formula

Product_{m > 0} (1 - q^m) = Sum_{k} (-1)^k*x^a(k). - Paul Barry, Jul 20 2003
G.f.: x*(1+2*x)/(1-x)^3.
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(x+3*x^2/2).
a(n) = n*(3*n-1)/2.
a(-n) = A005449(n).
a(n) = binomial(3*n, 2)/3. - Paul Barry, Jul 20 2003
a(n) = A000290(n) + A000217(n-1). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 07 2004
a(0) = 0, a(1) = 1; for n >= 2, a(n) = 2*a(n-1) - a(n-2) + 3. - Miklos Kristof, Mar 09 2005
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} (2*n - k). - Paul Barry, Aug 19 2005
a(n) = 3*A000217(n) - 2*n. - Lekraj Beedassy, Sep 26 2006
a(n) = A126890(n, n-1) for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 30 2006
a(n) = A049452(n) - A022266(n) = A033991(n) - A005476(n). - Zerinvary Lajos, Jun 12 2007
Equals A034856(n) + (n - 1)^2. Also equals A051340 * [1,2,3,...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 27 2007
a(n) = binomial(n+1, 2) + 2*binomial(n, 2).
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3), a(0) = 0, a(1) = 1, a(2) = 5. - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Dec 02 2008
a(n) = a(n-1) + 3*n-2 with n > 0, a(0)=0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 20 2010
a(n) = A000217(n) + 2*A000217(n-1). - Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 20 2010
a(n) = A014642(n)/8. - Omar E. Pol, Aug 18 2011
a(n) = A142150(n) + A191967(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 07 2012
a(n) = (A000290(n) + A000384(n))/2 = (A000217(n) + A000566(n))/2 = A049450(n)/2. - Omar E. Pol, Jan 11 2013
a(n) = n*A000217(n) - (n-1)*A000217(n-1). - Bruno Berselli, Jan 18 2013
a(n) = A005449(n) - n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 30 2013
From Oskar Wieland, Apr 10 2013: (Start)
a(n) = a(n+1) - A016777(n),
a(n) = a(n+2) - A016969(n),
a(n) = a(n+3) - A016777(n)*3 = a(n+3) - A017197(n),
a(n) = a(n+4) - A016969(n)*2 = a(n+4) - A017641(n),
a(n) = a(n+5) - A016777(n)*5,
a(n) = a(n+6) - A016969(n)*3,
a(n) = a(n+7) - A016777(n)*7,
a(n) = a(n+8) - A016969(n)*4,
a(n) = a(n+9) - A016777(n)*9. (End)
a(n) = A000217(2n-1) - A000217(n-1), for n > 0. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 17 2013
a(n) = A002411(n) - A002411(n-1). - J. M. Bergot, Jun 12 2013
Sum_{n>=1} a(n)/n! = 2.5*exp(1). - Richard R. Forberg, Jul 15 2013
a(n) = floor(n/(exp(2/(3*n)) - 1)), for n > 0. - Richard R. Forberg, Jul 27 2013
From Vladimir Shevelev, Jan 24 2014: (Start)
a(3*a(n) + 4*n + 1) = a(3*a(n) + 4*n) + a(3*n+1).
A generalization. Let {G_k(n)}_(n >= 0) be sequence of k-gonal numbers (k >= 3). Then the following identity holds: G_k((k-2)*G_k(n) + c(k-3)*n + 1) = G_k((k-2)*G_k(n) + c(k-3)*n) + G_k((k-2)*n + 1), where c = A000124. (End)
A242357(a(n)) = 1 for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, May 11 2014
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n)= (1/3)*(9*log(3) - sqrt(3)*Pi). - Enrique Pérez Herrero, Dec 02 2014. See the decimal expansion A244641.
a(n) = (A000292(6*n+k-1)-A000292(k))/(6*n-1)-A000217(3*n+k), for any k >= 0. - Manfred Arens, Apr 26 2015 [minor edits from Wolfdieter Lang, May 10 2015]
a(n) = A258708(3*n-1,1) for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jun 23 2015
a(n) = A007584(n) - A245301(n-1), for n > 0. - Manfred Arens, Jan 31 2016
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 2*(sqrt(3)*Pi - 6*log(2))/3 = 0.85501000622865446... - Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jul 28 2016
a(m+n) = a(m) + a(n) + 3*m*n. - Etienne Dupuis, Feb 16 2017
In general, let P(k,n) be the n-th k-gonal number. Then P(k,m+n) = P(k,m) + (k-2)mn + P(k,n). - Charlie Marion, Apr 16 2017
a(n) = A023855(2*n-1) - A023855(2*n-2). - Luc Rousseau, Feb 24 2018
a(n) = binomial(n,2) + n^2. - Pedro Caceres, Jul 28 2019
Product_{n>=2} (1 - 1/a(n)) = 3/5. - Amiram Eldar, Jan 21 2021
(n+1)*(a(n^2) + a(n^2+1) + ... + a(n^2+n)) = n*(a(n^2+n+1) + ... + a(n^2+2n)). - Charlie Marion, Apr 28 2024
a(n) = Sum_{k = 0..3*n} (-1)^(n+k+1) * binomial(k, 2)*binomial(3*n+k-1, 2*k). - Peter Bala, Nov 04 2024

Extensions

Incorrect example removed by Joerg Arndt, Mar 11 2010

A001399 a(n) is the number of partitions of n into at most 3 parts; also partitions of n+3 in which the greatest part is 3; also number of unlabeled multigraphs with 3 nodes and n edges.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 19, 21, 24, 27, 30, 33, 37, 40, 44, 48, 52, 56, 61, 65, 70, 75, 80, 85, 91, 96, 102, 108, 114, 120, 127, 133, 140, 147, 154, 161, 169, 176, 184, 192, 200, 208, 217, 225, 234, 243, 252, 261, 271, 280, 290, 300, 310, 320, 331, 341
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Also number of tripods (trees with exactly 3 leaves) on n vertices. - Eric W. Weisstein, Mar 05 2011
Also number of partitions of n+3 into exactly 3 parts; number of partitions of n in which the greatest part is less than or equal to 3; and the number of nonnegative solutions to b + 2c + 3d = n.
Also a(n) gives number of partitions of n+6 into 3 distinct parts and number of partitions of 2n+9 into 3 distinct and odd parts, e.g., 15 = 11 + 3 + 1 = 9 + 5 + 1 = 7 + 5 + 3. - Jon Perry, Jan 07 2004
Also bracelets with n+3 beads 3 of which are red (so there are 2 possibilities with 5 beads).
More generally, the number of partitions of n into at most k parts is also the number of partitions of n+k into k positive parts, the number of partitions of n+k in which the greatest part is k, the number of partitions of n in which the greatest part is less than or equal to k, the number of partitions of n+k(k+1)/2 into exactly k distinct positive parts, the number of nonnegative solutions to b + 2c + 3d + ... + kz = n and the number of nonnegative solutions to 2c + 3d + ... + kz <= n. - Henry Bottomley, Apr 17 2001
Also coefficient of q^n in the expansion of (m choose 3)_q as m goes to infinity. - Y. Kelly Itakura (yitkr(AT)mta.ca), Aug 21 2002
From Winston C. Yang (winston(AT)cs.wisc.edu), Apr 30 2002: (Start)
Write 1,2,3,4,... in a hexagonal spiral around 0, then a(n) for n > 0 is formed by the folding points (including the initial 1). The spiral begins:
.
85--84--83--82--81--80
/ \
86 56--55--54--53--52 79
/ / \ \
87 57 33--32--31--30 51 78
/ / / \ \ \
88 58 34 16--15--14 29 50 77
/ / / / \ \ \ \
89 59 35 17 5---4 13 28 49 76
/ / / / / \ \ \ \ \
90 60 36 18 6 0 3 12 27 48 75
/ / / / / / / / / / /
91 61 37 19 7 1---2 11 26 47 74
\ \ \ \ / / / /
62 38 20 8---9--10 25 46 73
\ \ \ / / /
63 39 21--22--23--24 45 72
\ \ / /
64 40--41--42--43--44 71
\ /
65--66--67--68--69--70
.
a(p) is maximal number of hexagons in a polyhex with perimeter at most 2p + 6. (End)
a(n-3) is the number of partitions of n into 3 distinct parts, where 0 is allowed as a part. E.g., at n=9, we can write 8+1+0, 7+2+0, 6+3+0, 4+5+0, 1+2+6, 1+3+5 and 2+3+4, which is a(6)=7. - Jon Perry, Jul 08 2003
a(n) gives number of partitions of n+6 into parts <=3 where each part is used at least once (subtract 6=1+2+3 from n). - Jon Perry, Jul 03 2004
This is also the number of partitions of n+3 into exactly 3 parts (there is a 1-to-1 correspondence between the number of partitions of n+3 in which the greatest part is 3 and the number of partitions of n+3 into exactly three parts). - Graeme McRae, Feb 07 2005
Apply the Riordan array (1/(1-x^3),x) to floor((n+2)/2). - Paul Barry, Apr 16 2005
Also, number of triangles that can be created with odd perimeter 3,5,7,9,11,... with all sides whole numbers. Note that triangles with even perimeter can be generated from the odd ones by increasing each side by 1. E.g., a(1) = 1 because perimeter 3 can make {1,1,1} 1 triangle. a(4) = 3 because perimeter 9 can make {1,4,4} {2,3,4} {3,3,3} 3 possible triangles. - Bruce Love (bruce_love(AT)ofs.edu.sg), Nov 20 2006
Also number of nonnegative solutions of the Diophantine equation x+2*y+3*z=n, cf. Pólya/Szegő reference.
From Vladimir Shevelev, Apr 23 2011: (Start)
Also a(n-3), n >= 3, is the number of non-equivalent necklaces of 3 beads each of them painted by one of n colors.
The sequence {a(n-3), n >= 3} solves the so-called Reis problem about convex k-gons in case k=3 (see our comment to A032279).
a(n-3) (n >= 3) is an essentially unimprovable upper estimate for the number of distinct values of the permanent in (0,1)-circulants of order n with three 1's in every row. (End)
A001399(n) is the number of 3-tuples (w,x,y) having all terms in {0,...,n} and w = 2*x+3*y. - Clark Kimberling, Jun 04 2012
Also, for n >= 3, a(n-3) is the number of the distinct triangles in an n-gon, see the Ngaokrajang links. - Kival Ngaokrajang, Mar 16 2013
Also, a(n) is the total number of 5-curve coin patterns (5C4S type: 5 curves covering full 4 coins and symmetry) packing into fountain of coins base (n+3). See illustration in links. - Kival Ngaokrajang, Oct 16 2013
Also a(n) = half the number of minimal zero sequences for Z_n of length 3 [Ponomarenko]. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 25 2014
Also, a(n) equals the number of linearly-independent terms at 2n-th order in the power series expansion of an Octahedral Rotational Energy Surface (cf. Harter & Patterson). - Bradley Klee, Jul 31 2015
Also Molien series for invariants of finite Coxeter groups D_3 and A_3. - N. J. A. Sloane, Jan 10 2016
Number of different distributions of n+6 identical balls in 3 boxes as x,y,z where 0 < x < y < z. - Ece Uslu and Esin Becenen, Jan 11 2016
a(n) is also the number of partitions of 2*n with <= n parts and no part >= 4. The bijection to partitions of n with no part >= 4 is: 1 <-> 2, 2 <-> 1 + 3, 3 <-> 3 + 3 (observing the order of these rules). The <- direction uses the following fact for partitions of 2*n with <= n parts and no part >=4: for each part 1 there is a part 3, and an even number (including 0) of remaining parts 3. - Wolfdieter Lang, May 21 2019
List of the terms in A000567(n>=1), A049450(n>=1), A033428(n>=1), A049451(n>=1), A045944(n>=1), and A003215(n) in nondecreasing order. List of the numbers A056105(n)-1, A056106(n)-1, A056107(n)-1, A056108(n)-1, A056109(n)-1, and A003215(m) with n >= 1 and m >= 0 in nondecreasing order. Numbers of the forms 3n*(n-1)+1, n*(3n-2), n*(3n-1), 3n^2, n*(3n+1), n*(3n+2) with n >= 1 listed in nondecreasing order. Integers m such that lattice points from 1 through m on a hexagonal spiral starting at 1 forms a convex polygon. - Ya-Ping Lu, Jan 24 2024

Examples

			G.f. = 1 + x + 2*x^2 + 3*x^3 + 4*x^4 + 5*x^5 + 7*x^6 + 8*x^7 + 10*x^8 + 12*x^9 + ...
Recall that in a necklace the adjacent beads have distinct colors. Suppose we have n colors with labels 1,...,n. Two colorings of the beads are equivalent if the cyclic sequences of the distances modulo n between labels of adjacent colors have the same period. If n=4, all colorings are equivalent. E.g., for the colorings {1,2,3} and {1,2,4} we have the same period {1,1,2} of distances modulo 4. So, a(n-3)=a(1)=1. If n=5, then we have two such periods {1,1,3} and {1,2,2} modulo 5. Thus a(2)=2. - _Vladimir Shevelev_, Apr 23 2011
a(0) = 1, i.e., {1,2,3} Number of different distributions of 6 identical balls to 3 boxes as x,y and z where 0 < x < y < z. - _Ece Uslu_, Esin Becenen, Jan 11 2016
a(3) = 3, i.e., {1,2,6}, {1,3,5}, {2,3,4} Number of different distributions of 9 identical balls in 3 boxes as x,y and z where 0 < x < y < z. - _Ece Uslu_, Esin Becenen, Jan 11 2016
From _Gus Wiseman_, Apr 15 2019: (Start)
The a(0) = 1 through a(8) = 10 integer partitions of n with at most three parts are the following. The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A037144.
  ()  (1)  (2)   (3)    (4)    (5)    (6)    (7)    (8)
           (11)  (21)   (22)   (32)   (33)   (43)   (44)
                 (111)  (31)   (41)   (42)   (52)   (53)
                        (211)  (221)  (51)   (61)   (62)
                               (311)  (222)  (322)  (71)
                                      (321)  (331)  (332)
                                      (411)  (421)  (422)
                                             (511)  (431)
                                                    (521)
                                                    (611)
The a(0) = 1 through a(7) = 8 integer partitions of n + 3 whose greatest part is 3 are the following. The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A080193.
  (3)  (31)  (32)   (33)    (322)    (332)     (333)      (3322)
             (311)  (321)   (331)    (3221)    (3222)     (3331)
                    (3111)  (3211)   (3311)    (3321)     (32221)
                            (31111)  (32111)   (32211)    (33211)
                                     (311111)  (33111)    (322111)
                                               (321111)   (331111)
                                               (3111111)  (3211111)
                                                          (31111111)
Non-isomorphic representatives of the a(0) = 1 through a(5) = 5 unlabeled multigraphs with 3 vertices and n edges are the following.
  {}  {12}  {12,12}  {12,12,12}  {12,12,12,12}  {12,12,12,12,12}
            {13,23}  {12,13,23}  {12,13,23,23}  {12,13,13,23,23}
                     {13,23,23}  {13,13,23,23}  {12,13,23,23,23}
                                 {13,23,23,23}  {13,13,23,23,23}
                                                {13,23,23,23,23}
The a(0) = 1 through a(8) = 10 strict integer partitions of n - 6 with three parts are the following (A = 10, B = 11). The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A007304.
  (321)  (421)  (431)  (432)  (532)  (542)  (543)  (643)   (653)
                (521)  (531)  (541)  (632)  (642)  (652)   (743)
                       (621)  (631)  (641)  (651)  (742)   (752)
                              (721)  (731)  (732)  (751)   (761)
                                     (821)  (741)  (832)   (842)
                                            (831)  (841)   (851)
                                            (921)  (931)   (932)
                                                   (A21)   (941)
                                                           (A31)
                                                           (B21)
The a(0) = 1 through a(8) = 10 integer partitions of n + 3 with three parts are the following. The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A014612.
  (111)  (211)  (221)  (222)  (322)  (332)  (333)  (433)  (443)
                (311)  (321)  (331)  (422)  (432)  (442)  (533)
                       (411)  (421)  (431)  (441)  (532)  (542)
                              (511)  (521)  (522)  (541)  (551)
                                     (611)  (531)  (622)  (632)
                                            (621)  (631)  (641)
                                            (711)  (721)  (722)
                                                   (811)  (731)
                                                          (821)
                                                          (911)
The a(0) = 1 through a(8) = 10 integer partitions of n whose greatest part is <= 3 are the following. The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A051037.
  ()  (1)  (2)   (3)    (22)    (32)     (33)      (322)      (332)
           (11)  (21)   (31)    (221)    (222)     (331)      (2222)
                 (111)  (211)   (311)    (321)     (2221)     (3221)
                        (1111)  (2111)   (2211)    (3211)     (3311)
                                (11111)  (3111)    (22111)    (22211)
                                         (21111)   (31111)    (32111)
                                         (111111)  (211111)   (221111)
                                                   (1111111)  (311111)
                                                              (2111111)
                                                              (11111111)
The a(0) = 1 through a(6) = 7 strict integer partitions of 2n+9 with 3 parts, all of which are odd, are the following. The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A307534.
  (5,3,1)  (7,3,1)  (7,5,1)  (7,5,3)   (9,5,3)   (9,7,3)   (9,7,5)
                    (9,3,1)  (9,5,1)   (9,7,1)   (11,5,3)  (11,7,3)
                             (11,3,1)  (11,5,1)  (11,7,1)  (11,9,1)
                                       (13,3,1)  (13,5,1)  (13,5,3)
                                                 (15,3,1)  (13,7,1)
                                                           (15,5,1)
                                                           (17,3,1)
The a(0) = 1 through a(8) = 10 strict integer partitions of n + 3 with 3 parts where 0 is allowed as a part (A = 10):
  (210)  (310)  (320)  (420)  (430)  (530)  (540)  (640)  (650)
                (410)  (510)  (520)  (620)  (630)  (730)  (740)
                       (321)  (610)  (710)  (720)  (820)  (830)
                              (421)  (431)  (810)  (910)  (920)
                                     (521)  (432)  (532)  (A10)
                                            (531)  (541)  (542)
                                            (621)  (631)  (632)
                                                   (721)  (641)
                                                          (731)
                                                          (821)
The a(0) = 1 through a(7) = 7 integer partitions of n + 6 whose distinct parts are 1, 2, and 3 are the following. The Heinz numbers of these partitions are given by A143207.
  (321)  (3211)  (3221)   (3321)    (32221)    (33221)     (33321)
                 (32111)  (32211)   (33211)    (322211)    (322221)
                          (321111)  (322111)   (332111)    (332211)
                                    (3211111)  (3221111)   (3222111)
                                               (32111111)  (3321111)
                                                           (32211111)
                                                           (321111111)
(End)
Partitions of 2*n with <= n parts and no part >= 4: a(3) = 3 from (2^3), (1,2,3), (3^2) mapping to (1^3), (1,2), (3), the partitions of 3 with no part >= 4, respectively. - _Wolfdieter Lang_, May 21 2019
		

References

  • R. Ayoub, An Introduction to the Analytic Theory of Numbers, Amer. Math. Soc., 1963; Chapter III, Problem 33.
  • L. Comtet, Advanced Combinatorics, Reidel, 1974, p. 110, D(n); page 263, #18, P_n^{3}.
  • J. L. Gross and J. Yellen, eds., Handbook of Graph Theory, CRC Press, 2004; p. 517.
  • H. Gupta et al., Tables of Partitions. Royal Society Mathematical Tables, Vol. 4, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, p. 2.
  • F. Harary and E. M. Palmer, Graphical Enumeration, Academic Press, NY, 1973, p. 88, (4.1.18).
  • G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers. 3rd ed., Oxford Univ. Press, 1954, p. 275.
  • R. Honsberger, Mathematical Gems III, Math. Assoc. Amer., 1985, p. 39.
  • J. H. van Lint, Combinatorial Seminar Eindhoven, Lecture Notes Math., 382 (1974), see pp. 33-34.
  • G. Pólya and G. Szegő, Problems and Theorems in Analysis I (Springer 1924, reprinted 1972), Part One, Chap. 1, Sect. 1, Problem 25.
  • 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

Programs

  • Haskell
    a001399 = p [1,2,3] where
       p _      0 = 1
       p []     _ = 0
       p ks'@(k:ks) m = if m < k then 0 else p ks' (m - k) + p ks m
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 28 2013
    
  • Magma
    I:=[1,1,2,3,4,5]; [n le 6 select I[n] else Self(n-1)+Self(n-2)-Self(n-4)-Self(n-5)+Self(n-6): n in [1..80]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Feb 14 2015
    
  • Magma
    [#RestrictedPartitions(n,{1,2,3}): n in [0..62]]; // Marius A. Burtea, Jan 06 2019
    
  • Magma
    [Round((n+3)^2/12): n in [0..70]]; // Marius A. Burtea, Jan 06 2019
    
  • Maple
    A001399 := proc(n)
        round( (n+3)^2/12) ;
    end proc:
    seq(A001399(n),n=0..40) ;
    with(combstruct):ZL4:=[S,{S=Set(Cycle(Z,card<4))}, unlabeled]:seq(count(ZL4,size=n),n=0..61); # Zerinvary Lajos, Sep 24 2007
    B:=[S,{S = Set(Sequence(Z,1 <= card),card <=3)},unlabelled]: seq(combstruct[count](B, size=n), n=0..61); # Zerinvary Lajos, Mar 21 2009
  • Mathematica
    CoefficientList[ Series[ 1/((1 - x)*(1 - x^2)*(1 - x^3)), {x, 0, 65} ], x ]
    Table[ Length[ IntegerPartitions[n, 3]], {n, 0, 61} ] (* corrected by Jean-François Alcover, Aug 08 2012 *)
    k = 3; Table[(Apply[Plus, Map[EulerPhi[ # ]Binomial[n/#, k/# ] &, Divisors[GCD[n, k]]]]/n + Binomial[If[OddQ[n], n - 1, n - If[OddQ[k], 2, 0]]/2, If[OddQ[k], k - 1, k]/2])/2, {n, k, 50}] (* Robert A. Russell, Sep 27 2004 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{1,1,0,-1,-1,1},{1,1,2,3,4,5},70] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jun 21 2012 *)
    a[ n_] := With[{m = Abs[n + 3] - 3}, Length[ IntegerPartitions[ m, 3]]]; (* Michael Somos, Dec 25 2014 *)
    k=3 (* Number of red beads in bracelet problem *);CoefficientList[Series[(1/k Plus@@(EulerPhi[#] (1-x^#)^(-(k/#))&/@Divisors[k])+(1+x)/(1-x^2)^Floor[(k+2)/2])/2,{x,0,50}],x] (* Herbert Kociemba, Nov 04 2016 *)
    Table[Length[Select[IntegerPartitions[n,{3}],UnsameQ@@#&]],{n,0,30}] (* Gus Wiseman, Apr 15 2019 *)
  • PARI
    {a(n) = round((n + 3)^2 / 12)}; /* Michael Somos, Sep 04 2006 */
    
  • Python
    [round((n+3)**2 / 12) for n in range(0,62)] # Ya-Ping Lu, Jan 24 2024

Formula

G.f.: 1/((1 - x) * (1 - x^2) * (1 - x^3)) = -1/((x+1)*(x^2+x+1)*(x-1)^3); Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
a(n) = round((n + 3)^2/12). Note that this cannot be of the form (2*i + 1)/2, so ties never arise.
a(n) = A008284(n+3, 3), n >= 0.
a(n) = 1 + a(n-2) + a(n-3) - a(n-5) for all n in Z. - Michael Somos, Sep 04 2006
a(n) = a(-6 - n) for all n in Z. - Michael Somos, Sep 04 2006
a(6*n) = A003215(n), a(6*n + 1) = A000567(n + 1), a(6*n + 2) = A049450(n + 1), a(6*n + 3) = A033428(n + 1), a(6*n + 4) = A049451(n + 1), a(6*n + 5) = A045944(n + 1).
a(n) = a(n-1) + A008615(n+2) = a(n-2) + A008620(n) = a(n-3) + A008619(n) = A001840(n+1) - a(n-1) = A002620(n+2) - A001840(n) = A000601(n) - A000601(n-1). - Henry Bottomley, Apr 17 2001
P(n, 3) = (1/72) * (6*n^2 - 7 - 9*pcr{1, -1}(2, n) + 8*pcr{2, -1, -1}(3, n)) (see Comtet). [Here "pcr" stands for "prime circulator" and it is defined on p. 109 of Comtet, while the formula appears on p. 110. - Petros Hadjicostas, Oct 03 2019]
Let m > 0 and -3 <= p <= 2 be defined by n = 6*m+p-3; then for n > -3, a(n) = 3*m^2 + p*m, and for n = -3, a(n) = 3*m^2 + p*m + 1. - Floor van Lamoen, Jul 23 2001
72*a(n) = 17 + 6*(n+1)*(n+5) + 9*(-1)^n - 8*A061347(n). - Benoit Cloitre, Feb 09 2003
From Jon Perry, Jun 17 2003: (Start)
a(n) = 6*t(floor(n/6)) + (n%6) * (floor(n/6) + 1) + (n mod 6 == 0?1:0), where t(n) = n*(n+1)/2.
a(n) = ceiling(1/12*n^2 + 1/2*n) + (n mod 6 == 0?1:0).
[Here "n%6" means "n mod 6" while "(n mod 6 == 0?1:0)" means "if n mod 6 == 0 then 1, else 0" (as in C).]
(End)
a(n) = Sum_{i=0..floor(n/3)} 1 + floor((n - 3*i)/2). - Jon Perry, Jun 27 2003
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} floor((k + 2)/2) * (cos(2*Pi*(n - k)/3 + Pi/3)/3 + sqrt(3) * sin(2*Pi*(n-k)/3 + Pi/3)/3 + 1/3). - Paul Barry, Apr 16 2005
(m choose 3)_q = (q^m-1) * (q^(m-1) - 1) * (q^(m-2) - 1)/((q^3 - 1) * (q^2 - 1) * (q - 1)).
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} floor((3 + n - 2*k)/3). - Paul Barry, Nov 11 2003
A117220(n) = a(A003586(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 04 2006
a(n) = 3 * Sum_{i=2..n+1} floor(i/2) - floor(i/3). - Thomas Wieder, Feb 11 2007
Identical to the number of points inside or on the boundary of the integer grid of {I, J}, bounded by the three straight lines I = 0, I - J = 0 and I + 2J = n. - Jonathan Vos Post, Jul 03 2007
a(n) = A026820(n,3) for n > 2. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 21 2010
Euler transform of length 3 sequence [ 1, 1, 1]. - Michael Somos, Feb 25 2012
a(n) = A005044(2*n + 3) = A005044(2*n + 6). - Michael Somos, Feb 25 2012
a(n) = A000212(n+3) - A002620(n+3). - Richard R. Forberg, Dec 08 2013
a(n) = a(n-1) + a(n-2) - a(n-4) - a(n-5) + a(n-6). - David Neil McGrath, Feb 14 2015
a(n) = floor((n^2+3)/12) + floor((n+2)/2). - Giacomo Guglieri, Apr 02 2019
From Devansh Singh, May 28 2020: (Start)
Let p(n, 3) be the number of 3-part integer partitions in which every part is > 0.
Then for n >= 3, p(n, 3) is equal to:
(n^2 - 1)/12 when n is odd and 3 does not divide n.
(n^2 + 3)/12 when n is odd and 3 divides n.
(n^2 - 4)/12 when n is even and 3 does not divide n.
(n^2)/12 when n is even and 3 divides n.
For n >= 3, p(n, 3) = a(n-3). (End)
a(n) = floor(((n+3)^2 + 4)/12). - Vladimír Modrák, Zuzana Soltysova, Dec 08 2020
Sum_{n>=0} 1/a(n) = 15/4 - Pi/(2*sqrt(3)) + Pi^2/18 + tanh(Pi/(2*sqrt(3)))*Pi/sqrt(3). - Amiram Eldar, Sep 29 2022
E.g.f.: exp(-x)*(9 + exp(2*x)*(47 + 42*x + 6*x^2) + 16*exp(x/2)*cos(sqrt(3)*x/2))/72. - Stefano Spezia, Mar 05 2023
a(6n) = 1+6*A000217(n); Sum_{i=1..n} a(6*i) = A000578(n+1). - David García Herrero, May 05 2024

Extensions

Name edited by Gus Wiseman, Apr 15 2019

A045944 Rhombic matchstick numbers: a(n) = n*(3*n+2).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 5, 16, 33, 56, 85, 120, 161, 208, 261, 320, 385, 456, 533, 616, 705, 800, 901, 1008, 1121, 1240, 1365, 1496, 1633, 1776, 1925, 2080, 2241, 2408, 2581, 2760, 2945, 3136, 3333, 3536, 3745, 3960, 4181, 4408, 4641, 4880, 5125, 5376, 5633, 5896, 6165, 6440
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

From Floor van Lamoen, Jul 21 2001: (Start)
Write 1,2,3,4,... in a hexagonal spiral around 0, then a(n) is the n-th term of the sequence found by reading the line from 0 in the direction 0,5,.... The spiral begins:
.
85--84--83--82--81--80
. \
56--55--54--53--52 79
/ . \ \
57 33--32--31--30 51 78
/ / . \ \ \
58 34 16--15--14 29 50 77
/ / / . \ \ \ \
59 35 17 5---4 13 28 49 76
/ / / / . \ \ \ \ \
60 36 18 6 0 3 12 27 48 75
/ / / / / / / / / /
61 37 19 7 1---2 11 26 47 74
\ \ \ \ / / / /
62 38 20 8---9--10 25 46 73
\ \ \ / / /
63 39 21--22--23--24 45 72
\ \ / /
64 40--41--42--43--44 71
\ /
65--66--67--68--69--70
(End)
Connection to triangular numbers: a(n) = 4*T_n + S_n where T_n is the n-th triangular number and S_n is the n-th square. - William A. Tedeschi, Sep 12 2010
Also, second octagonal numbers. - Bruno Berselli, Jan 13 2011
Sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 16, ... and the line from 5, in the direction 5, 33, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized octagonal numbers A001082. - Omar E. Pol, Jul 18 2012
Let P denote the points from the n X n grid. A(n-1) also coincides with the minimum number of points Q needed to "block" P, that is, every line segment spanned by two points from P must contain one point from Q. - Manfred Scheucher, Aug 30 2018
Also the number of internal edges of an (n+1)*(n+1) "square" of hexagons; i.e., n+1 rows, each of n+1 edge-adjacent hexagons, stacked with minimal overhang. - Jon Hart, Sep 29 2019
For n >= 1, the continued fraction expansion of sqrt(27*a(n)) is [9n+2; {1, 2n-1, 1, 1, 1, 2n-1, 1, 18n+4}]. - Magus K. Chu, Oct 13 2022

Crossrefs

Bisection of A001859. See Comments of A135713.
Cf. second n-gonal numbers: A005449, A014105, A147875, A179986, A033954, A062728, A135705.
Cf. A056109.
Cf. A003154.

Programs

Formula

O.g.f.: x*(5+x)/(1-x)^3. - R. J. Mathar, Jan 07 2008
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3), with a(0)=0, a(1)=5, a(2)=16. - Harvey P. Dale, May 06 2011
a(n) = a(n-1) + 6*n - 1 (with a(0)=0). - Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 18 2010
For n > 0, a(n)^3 + (a(n)+1)^3 + ... + (a(n)+n)^3 + 2*A000217(n)^2 = (a(n) + n + 1)^3 + ... + (a(n) + 2n)^3; see also A033954. - Charlie Marion, Dec 08 2007
a(n) = Sum_{i=0..n-1} A016969(i) for n > 0. - Bruno Berselli, Jan 13 2011
a(n) = A174709(6*n+4). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013
a(n) = A001082(2*n). - Michael Turniansky, Aug 24 2013
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = (9 + sqrt(3)*Pi - 9*log(3))/12 = 0.3794906245574721941... . - Vaclav Kotesovec, Apr 27 2016
a(n) = A002378(n) + A014105(n). - J. M. Bergot, Apr 24 2018
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = Pi/sqrt(12) - 3/4. - Amiram Eldar, Jul 03 2020
E.g.f.: exp(x)*x*(5 + 3*x). - Stefano Spezia, Jun 08 2021
From Leo Tavares, Oct 14 2021: (Start)
a(n) = A000290(n) + 4*A000217(n). See Square Stars illustration.
a(n) = A000567(n+2) - A022144(n+1)
a(n) = A005563(n) + A001105(n).
a(n) = A056109(n) - 1. (End)
From Leo Tavares, Oct 06 2022: (Start)
a(n) = A003154(n+1) - A000567(n+1). See Split Stars illustration.
a(n) = A014105(n) + 2*A000217(n). (End)

A011379 a(n) = n^2*(n+1).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 2, 12, 36, 80, 150, 252, 392, 576, 810, 1100, 1452, 1872, 2366, 2940, 3600, 4352, 5202, 6156, 7220, 8400, 9702, 11132, 12696, 14400, 16250, 18252, 20412, 22736, 25230, 27900, 30752, 33792, 37026, 40460, 44100, 47952, 52022, 56316, 60840
Offset: 0

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Author

Glen Burch (gburch(AT)erols.com), Felice Russo

Keywords

Comments

(1) a(n) = sum of second string of n triangular numbers - sum of first n triangular numbers, or the 2n-th partial sum of triangular numbers (A000217) - the n-th partial sum of triangular numbers (A000217). The same for natural numbers gives squares. (2) a(n) = (n-th triangular number)*(the n-th even number) = n(n+1)/2 * (2n). - Amarnath Murthy, Nov 05 2002
Let M(n) be the n X n matrix m(i,j)=1/(i+j+x), let P(n,x) = (Product_{i=0..n-1} i!^2)/det(M(n)). Then P(n,x) is a polynomial with integer coefficients of degree n^2 and a(n) is the coefficient of x^(n^2-1). - Benoit Cloitre, Jan 15 2003
Y values of solutions of the equation: (X-Y)^3-X*Y=0. X values are a(n)=n*(n+1)^2 (see A045991) - Mohamed Bouhamida, May 09 2006
a(2d-1) is the number of self-avoiding walk of length 3 in the d-dimensional hypercubic lattice. - Michael Somos, Sep 06 2006
a(n) mod 10 is periodic 5: repeat [0, 2, 2, 6, 0]. - Mohamed Bouhamida, Sep 05 2009
This sequence is related to A005449 by a(n) = n*A005449(n)-sum(A005449(i), i=0..n-1), and this is the case d=3 in the identity n^2*(d*n+d-2)/2 - Sum_{k=0..n-1} k*(d*k+d-2)/2 = n*(n+d)*(2*d*n+d-3)/6. - Bruno Berselli, Nov 18 2010
Using (n, n+1) to generate a primitive Pythagorean triangle, the sides will be 2*n+1, 2*(n^2+n), and 2*n^2+2*n+1. Inscribing the largest rectangle with integral sides will have sides of length n and n^2+n. Side n is collinear to side 2*n+1 of the triangle and side n^2+n is collinear to side 2*(n^2+n) of the triangle. The areas of theses rectangles are a(n). - J. M. Bergot, Sep 22 2011
a(n+1) is the sum of n-th row of the triangle in A195437. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 23 2011
Partial sums of A049450. - Omar E. Pol, Jan 12 2013
From Jon Perry, May 11 2013: (Start)
Define a 'stable brick triangle' as:
-----
| c |
---------
| a | | b |
----------
with a, b, c > 0 and c <= a + b. This can be visualized as two bricks with a third brick on top. The third brick can only be as strong as a+b, otherwise the wall collapses - for example, (1,2,4) is unstable.
a(n) gives the number of stable brick triangles that can be formed if the two supporting bricks are 1 <= a <= n and 1 <= b <= n: a(n) = Sum_{a=1..n} Sum_{b=1..n} Sum_c 1 = n^3 + n^2 as given in the Adamchuk formula.
So for i=j=n=2 we have 4:
1 2 3 4
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
For example, n=2 gives 2 from [a=1,b=1], 3 from both [a=1,b=2] and [a=2,b=1] and 4 from [a=2,b=2] so a(2) = 2 + 3 + 3 + 4 = 12. (End)
Define the infinite square array m(n,k) by m(n,k) = (n-k)^2 if n >= k >= 0 and by m(n,k) = (k+n)*(k-n) if 0 <= n <= k. This contains A120070 below the diagonal. Then a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} m(n,k) + Sum_{r=0..n} m(r,n), the "hook sum" of the terms to the left of m(n,n) and above m(n,n) with irrelevant (vanishing) terms on the diagonal. - J. M. Bergot, Aug 16 2013
a(n) is the sum of all pairs with repetition drawn from the set of odd numbers 2*n-3. This is similar to A027480 but using the odd integers instead. Example using n=3 gives the odd numbers 1,3,5: 1+1, 1+3, 1+5, 3+3, 3+5,5+5 having a total of 36=a(3). - J. M. Bergot, Apr 05 2016
a(n) is the first Zagreb index of the complete graph K[n+1]. The first Zagreb index of a simple connected graph is the sum of the squared degrees of its vertices. Alternately, it is the sum of the degree sums d(i)+d(j) over all edges ij of the graph. - Emeric Deutsch, Nov 07 2016
a(n-2) is the maximum sigma irregularity over all trees with n vertices. The extremal graphs are stars. (The sigma irregularity of a graph is the sum of squares of the differences between the degrees over all edges of the graph.) - Allan Bickle, Jun 14 2023

Examples

			a(3) = 3^2+3^3 = 36.
		

References

  • L. B. W. Jolley, "Summation of Series", Dover Publications, 1961, pp. 50, 64.

Crossrefs

Cf. A011379, A181617, A270205 (sigma irregularities of maximal k-degenerate graphs).

Programs

Formula

a(n) = 2*A002411(n).
a(n) = Sum_{j=1..n} (Sum_{i=1..n} (i+j)), row sums of A126890 skipping numbers in the first column. - Alexander Adamchuk, Oct 12 2004
Sum_{n>0} 1/a(n) = (Pi^2 - 6)/6 = 0.6449340... [Jolley eq 272] - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 22 2006
a(n) = 2*n*binomial(n+1,2) = 2*n*A000217(n). - Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Feb 10 2012
G.f.: 2*x*(1 + 2*x)/(1 - x)^4. - Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Feb 11 2012
a(n) = A000330(n) + A002412(n) = A000292(n) + A002413(n). - Omar E. Pol, Jan 11 2013
a(n) = A245334(n+1,2), n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 31 2014
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = A013661-1. - R. J. Mathar, Oct 18 2019 [corrected by Jason Yuen, Aug 04 2024]
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 1 + Pi^2/12 - 2*log(2). - Amiram Eldar, Jul 04 2020
E.g.f.: exp(x)*x*(2 + 4*x + x^2). - Stefano Spezia, May 20 2021
a(n) = n*A002378(n) = A000578(n) + A000290(n). - J.S. Seneschal, Jun 18 2024

A035008 Total number of possible knight moves on an (n+2) X (n+2) chessboard, if the knight is placed anywhere.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 16, 48, 96, 160, 240, 336, 448, 576, 720, 880, 1056, 1248, 1456, 1680, 1920, 2176, 2448, 2736, 3040, 3360, 3696, 4048, 4416, 4800, 5200, 5616, 6048, 6496, 6960, 7440, 7936, 8448, 8976, 9520, 10080, 10656, 11248, 11856, 12480, 13120, 13776
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Ulrich Schimke (ulrschimke(AT)aol.com), Dec 11 1999

Keywords

Comments

16 times the triangular numbers A000217.
Centered 16-gonal numbers A069129, minus 1. Also, sequence found by reading the segment (0, 16) together with the line from 16, in the direction 16, 48, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the triangular numbers A000217. - Omar E. Pol, Apr 26 2008, Nov 20 2008
For n >= 1, number of permutations of n+1 objects selected from 5 objects v, w, x, y, z with repetition allowed, containing n-1 v's. Examples: at n=1, n-1=0 (i.e., zero v's), and a(1)=16 because we have ww, wx, wy, wz, xw, xx, xy, xz, yw, yx, yy, yz, zw, zx, zy, zz; at n=2, n-1=1 (i.e., one v), and there are 3 permutations corresponding to each one in the n=1 case (e.g., the single v can be inserted in any of three places in the 2-object permutation xy, yielding vxy, xvy, and xyv), so a(2) = 3*a(1) = 3*16 = 48; at n=3, n-1=2 (i.e., two v's), and a(3) = C(4,2)*a(1) = 6*16 = 96; etc. - Zerinvary Lajos, Aug 07 2008 (this needs clarification, Joerg Arndt, Feb 23 2014)
Sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 16, ... and the same line from 0, in the direction 0, 48, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized 18-gonal numbers. - Omar E. Pol, Oct 03 2011
For n > 0, a(n) is the area of the triangle with vertices at ((n-1)^2, n^2), ((n+1)^2, (n+2)^2), and ((n+3)^2, (n+2)^2). - J. M. Bergot, May 22 2014
For n > 0, a(n) is the number of self-intersecting points in star polygon {4*(n+1)/(2*n+1)}. - Bui Quang Tuan, Mar 28 2015
Equivalently: integers k such that k$ / (k/2)! and k$ / (k/2+1)! are both squares when A000178 (k) = k$ = 1!*2!*...*k! is the superfactorial of k (see A348692 for further information). - Bernard Schott, Dec 02 2021

Examples

			3 X 3-Board: knight can be placed in 8 positions with 2 moves from each, so a(1) = 16.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A033586 (King), A035005 (Queen), A035006 (Rook), A002492 (Bishop) and A049450 (Pawn).
Cf. A348692.
Subsequence of A008586 and of A349081.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = 8*n*(n+1).
G.f.: 16*x/(1-x)^3.
a(n) = A069129(n+1) - 1. - Omar E. Pol, Apr 26 2008
a(n) = binomial(n+1,2)*4^2, n >= 0. - Zerinvary Lajos, Aug 07 2008
a(n) = 8*n^2 + 8*n = 16*A000217(n) = 8*A002378(n) = 4*A046092(n) = 2*A033996(n). - Omar E. Pol, Dec 12 2008
a(n) = a(n-1) + 16*n, with a(0)=0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 17 2010
E.g.f.: 8*exp(x)*x*(2 + x). - Stefano Spezia, May 19 2021
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 22 2023: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 1/8.
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = (2*log(2) - 1)/8.
Product_{n>=1} (1 - 1/a(n)) = -(8/Pi)*cos(sqrt(3/2)*Pi/2).
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = (8/Pi)*cos(Pi/(2*sqrt(2))). (End)

Extensions

More terms from Erich Friedman
Minor errors corrected and edited by Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 04 2010

A028896 6 times triangular numbers: a(n) = 3*n*(n+1).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 6, 18, 36, 60, 90, 126, 168, 216, 270, 330, 396, 468, 546, 630, 720, 816, 918, 1026, 1140, 1260, 1386, 1518, 1656, 1800, 1950, 2106, 2268, 2436, 2610, 2790, 2976, 3168, 3366, 3570, 3780, 3996, 4218, 4446, 4680, 4920, 5166, 5418, 5676
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Joe Keane (jgk(AT)jgk.org), Dec 11 1999

Keywords

Comments

From Floor van Lamoen, Jul 21 2001: (Start)
Write 1,2,3,4,... in a hexagonal spiral around 0; then a(n) is the sequence found by reading the line from 0 in the direction 0, 6, ...
The spiral begins:
85--84--83--82--81--80
/ \
86 56--55--54--53--52 79
/ / \ \
87 57 33--32--31--30 51 78
/ / / \ \ \
88 58 34 16--15--14 29 50 77
/ / / / \ \ \ \
89 59 35 17 5---4 13 28 49 76
/ / / / / \ \ \ \ \
<==90==60==36==18===6===0 3 12 27 48 75
/ / / / / / / / / /
61 37 19 7 1---2 11 26 47 74
\ \ \ \ / / / /
62 38 20 8---9--10 25 46 73
\ \ \ / / /
63 39 21--22--23--24 45 72
\ \ / /
64 40--41--42--43--44 71
\ /
65--66--67--68--69--70
(End)
If Y is a 4-subset of an n-set X then, for n >= 5, a(n-5) is the number of (n-4)-subsets of X having exactly two elements in common with Y. - Milan Janjic, Dec 28 2007
a(n) is the maximal number of points of intersection of n+1 distinct triangles drawn in the plane. For example, two triangles can intersect in at most a(1) = 6 points (as illustrated in the Star of David configuration). - Terry Stickels (Terrystickels(AT)aol.com), Jul 12 2008
Also sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 6, ... and the same line from 0, in the direction 0, 18, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized octagonal numbers A001082. Axis perpendicular to A195143 in the same spiral. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 18 2011
Partial sums of A008588. - R. J. Mathar, Aug 28 2014
Also the number of 5-cycles in the (n+5)-triangular honeycomb acute knight graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Jul 27 2017
a(n-4) is the maximum irregularity over all maximal 3-degenerate graphs with n vertices. The extremal graphs are 3-stars (K_3 joined to n-3 independent vertices). (The irregularity of a graph is the sum of the differences between the degrees over all edges of the graph.) - Allan Bickle, May 29 2023

Crossrefs

Cf. A002378 (3-cycles in triangular honeycomb acute knight graph), A045943 (4-cycles), A152773 (6-cycles).
Cf. A007531.
The partial sums give A007531. - Leo Tavares, Jan 22 2022
Cf. A002378, A046092, A028896 (irregularities of maximal k-degenerate graphs).

Programs

Formula

O.g.f.: 6*x/(1 - x)^3.
E.g.f.: 3*x*(x + 2)*exp(x). - G. C. Greubel, Aug 19 2017
a(n) = 6*A000217(n).
a(n) = polygorial(3, n+1). - Daniel Dockery (peritus(AT)gmail.com), Jun 16 2003
From Zerinvary Lajos, Mar 06 2007: (Start)
a(n) = A049598(n)/2.
a(n) = A124080(n) - A046092(n).
a(n) = A033996(n) - A002378(n). (End)
a(n) = A002378(n)*3 = A045943(n)*2. - Omar E. Pol, Dec 12 2008
a(n) = a(n-1) + 6*n for n>0, a(0)=0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 05 2010
a(n) = A003215(n) - 1. - Omar E. Pol, Oct 03 2011
From Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013: (Start)
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3) for n>2, a(0)=0, a(1)=6, a(2)=18.
a(n) = A174709(6*n + 5). (End)
a(n) = A049450(n) + 4*n. - Lear Young, Apr 24 2014
a(n) = Sum_{i = n..2*n} 2*i. - Bruno Berselli, Feb 14 2018
a(n) = A320047(1, n, 1). - Kolosov Petro, Oct 04 2018
a(n) = T(3*n) - T(2*n-2) + T(n-2), where T(n) = A000217(n). In general, T(k)*T(n) = Sum_{i=0..k-1} (-1)^i*T((k-i)*(n-i)). - Charlie Marion, Dec 04 2020
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 15 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 1/3.
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 2*log(2)/3 - 1/3. (End)
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 21 2023: (Start)
Product_{n>=1} (1 - 1/a(n)) = -(3/Pi)*cos(sqrt(7/3)*Pi/2).
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = (3/Pi)*cosh(Pi/(2*sqrt(3))). (End)

A002492 Sum of the first n even squares: 2*n*(n+1)*(2*n+1)/3.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 4, 20, 56, 120, 220, 364, 560, 816, 1140, 1540, 2024, 2600, 3276, 4060, 4960, 5984, 7140, 8436, 9880, 11480, 13244, 15180, 17296, 19600, 22100, 24804, 27720, 30856, 34220, 37820, 41664, 45760, 50116, 54740, 59640, 64824, 70300, 76076, 82160
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Total number of possible bishop moves on an n+1 X n+1 chessboard, if the bishop is placed anywhere. E.g., on a 3 X 3-Board: bishop has 8 X 2 moves and 1 X 4 moves, so a(2)=20. - Ulrich Schimke (ulrschimke(AT)aol.com)
Let M_n denote the n X n matrix M_n(i,j)=(i+j)^2; then the characteristic polynomial of M_n is x^n - a(n)x^(n-1) - .... - Michael Somos, Nov 14 2002
Partial sums of A016742. - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 19 2004
0,4,20,56,120 gives the number of electrons in closed shells in the double shell periodic system of elements. This is a new interpretation of the periodic system of the elements. The factor 4 in the formula 4*n(n+1)(2n+1)/6 plays a significant role, since it designates the degeneracy of electronic states in this system. Closed shells with more than 120 electrons are not expected to exist. - Karl-Dietrich Neubert (kdn(AT)neubert.net)
Inverse binomial transform of A240434. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Apr 13 2014
Atomic number of alkaline-earth metals of period 2n. - Natan Arie Consigli, Jul 03 2016
a(n) are the negative cubic coefficients in the expansion of sin(kx) into powers of sin(x) for the odd k: sin(kx) = k sin(x) - c(k) sin^3(x) + O(sin^5(x)); a(n) = c(2n+1) = A000292(2n). - Mathias Zechmeister, Jul 24 2022
Also the number of distinct series-parallel networks under series-parallel reduction on three unlabeled edges of n element kinds. - Michael R. Hayashi, Aug 02 2023

References

  • A. O. Barut, Group Structure of the Periodic System, in Wybourne, Ed., The Structure of Matter, University of Canterbury Press, Christchurch, 1972, p. 126.
  • Edward G. Mazur, Graphic Representation of the Periodic System during One Hundred Years, University of Alabama Press, Alabama, 1974.
  • W. Permans and J. Kemperman, "Nummeringspribleem van S. Dockx, Mathematisch Centrum. Amsterdam," Rapport ZW; 1949-005, 4 leaves, 19.8 X 34 cm.
  • 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

Cf. A033586 (King), A035005 (Queen), A035006 (Rook), A035008 (Knight) and A049450 (Pawn).

Programs

  • Magma
    [2*n*(n+1)*(2*n+1)/3: n in [0..40]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Jun 16 2011
  • Maple
    A002492:=n->2*n*(n+1)*(2*n+1)/3; seq(A002492(n), n=0..50); # Wesley Ivan Hurt, Apr 04 2014
  • Mathematica
    Table[2n(n+1)(2n+1)/3, {n,0,40}] (* or *) Binomial[2*Range[0,40]+2,3] (* or *) LinearRecurrence[{4,-6,4,-1}, {0,4,20,56},40] (* Harvey P. Dale, Aug 15 2012 *)
    Accumulate[(2*Range[0,40])^2] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jun 04 2019 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=2*n*(n+1)*(2*n+1)/3
    

Formula

G.f.: 4*x*(1+x)/(1-x)^4. - Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
a(-1-n) = -a(n).
a(n) = 4*A000330(n) = 2*A006331(n) = A000292(2*n).
a(n) = (-1)^(n+1)*A053120(2*n+1,3) (fourth unsigned column of Chebyshev T-triangle, zeros omitted).
a(n) = binomial(2*n+2, 3). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 19 2004
A035005(n+1) = a(n) + A035006(n+1) since Queen = Bishop + Rook. - Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 04 2010
a(n) - a(n-1) = 4*n^2. - Joerg Arndt, Jun 16 2011
a(n) = 4*a(n-1)-6*a(n-2)+4*a(n-3)-a(n-4) for n>3. - Harvey P. Dale, Aug 15 2012
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..3} C(n-2+k,n-2)*C(n+3-k,n), for n>2. - J. M. Bergot, Jun 14 2014
a(n) = 2*A006331(n). - R. J. Mathar, May 28 2016
From Natan Arie Consigli Jul 03 2016: (Start)
a(n) = A166464(n) - 1.
a(n) = A168380(2*n). (End)
a(n) = Sum_{i=0..n} A005408(i)*A005408(i-1)+1 with A005408(-1):=-1. - Bruno Berselli, Jan 09 2017
a(n) = A002412(n) + A016061(n). - Bruce J. Nicholson, Nov 12 2017
From Amiram Eldar, Jan 04 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 9/2 - 6*log(2).
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 3*Pi/2 - 9/2. (End)
a(n) = A081277(3, n-1) = (1+2*n)*binomial(n+1, n-2)*2^2/(n-1) for n > 0. - Mathias Zechmeister, Jul 26 2022
E.g.f.: 2*exp(x)*x*(6 + 9*x + 2*x^2)/3. - Stefano Spezia, Jul 31 2022

Extensions

Minor errors corrected and edited by Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 04 2010
Title modified by Charles R Greathouse IV at the suggestion of J. M. Bergot, Apr 05 2014

A049451 Twice second pentagonal numbers.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 4, 14, 30, 52, 80, 114, 154, 200, 252, 310, 374, 444, 520, 602, 690, 784, 884, 990, 1102, 1220, 1344, 1474, 1610, 1752, 1900, 2054, 2214, 2380, 2552, 2730, 2914, 3104, 3300, 3502, 3710, 3924, 4144, 4370, 4602, 4840, 5084, 5334, 5590, 5852, 6120, 6394, 6674, 6960, 7252, 7550, 7854
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Joe Keane (jgk(AT)jgk.org)

Keywords

Comments

From Floor van Lamoen, Jul 21 2001: (Start)
Write 1,2,3,4,... in a hexagonal spiral around 0, then a(n) is the sequence found by reading the line from 0 in the direction 0,4,... . The spiral begins:
.
52
. \
33--32--31--30 51
/ . \ \
34 16--15--14 29 50
/ / . \ \ \
35 17 5---4 13 28 49
/ / / . \ \ \ \
36 18 6 0 3 12 27 48
/ / / / / / / /
37 19 7 1---2 11 26 47
\ \ \ / / /
38 20 8---9--10 25 46
\ \ / /
39 21--22--23--24 45
\ /
40--41--42--43--44
(End)
Number of edges in the join of the complete bipartite graph of order 2n and the cycle graph of order n, K_n,n * C_n. - Roberto E. Martinez II, Jan 07 2002
The average of the first n elements starting from a(1) is equal to (n+1)^2. - Mario Catalani (mario.catalani(AT)unito.it), Apr 10 2003
If Y is a 4-subset of an n-set X then, for n >= 4, a(n-4) is the number of (n-4)-subsets of X having either one element or two elements in common with Y. - Milan Janjic, Dec 28 2007
With offset 1: the maximum possible sum of numbers in an N x N standard Minesweeper grid. - Dmitry Kamenetsky, Dec 14 2008
a(n) = A001399(6*n-2), number of partitions of 6*n-2 into parts < 4. For example a(2)=14 where the partitions of 6*2-2=10 into parts < 4 are [1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1], [1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,2], [1,1,1,1,1,1,1,3], [1,1,1,1,1,1,2,2], [1,1,1,1,1,2,3], [1,1,1,1,2,2,2], [1,1,1,1,3,3], [1,1,1,2,2,3], [1,1,2,2,2,2], [1,1,2,3,3], [1,2,2,2,3], [2,2,2,2,2], [1,3,3,3], [2,2,3,3]. - Adi Dani, Jun 07 2011
A003056 is the following array A read by antidiagonals:
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ...
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ...
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, ...
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, ...
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, ...
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, ...
and a(n) is the hook sum Sum_{k=0..n} A(n,k) + Sum_{r=0..n-1} A(r,n). - R. J. Mathar, Jun 30 2013
a(n)*Pi is the total length of 3 points circle center spiral after n rotations. The spiral length at each rotation (L(n)) is A016957. The spiral length ratio rounded down [floor(L(n)/L(1))] is A001651. See illustration in links. - Kival Ngaokrajang, Dec 27 2013
Partial sums give A114364. - Leo Tavares, Feb 25 2022
For n >= 1, the continued fraction expansion of sqrt(27*a(n)) is [9n+1; {2, 2n-1, 1, 4, 1, 2n-1, 2, 18n+2}]. - Magus K. Chu, Oct 13 2022

Examples

			From _Dmitry Kamenetsky_, Dec 14 2008, with slight rewording by Raymond Martineau (mart0258(AT)yahoo.com), Dec 16 2008: (Start)
For an N x N Minesweeper grid the highest sum of numbers is (N-1)(3*N-2). This is achieved by filling every second row with mines (shown as 'X'). For example, when N=5 the best grids are:
.
  X X X X X
  4 6 6 6 4
  X X X X X
  4 6 6 6 4
  X X X X X
.
  and
.
  2 3 3 3 2
  X X X X X
  4 6 6 6 4
  X X X X X
  2 3 3 3 2
.
each giving a total of 52. (End)
		

References

  • L. B. W. Jolley, Summation of Series, Dover Publications, 1961, p. 12.

Crossrefs

Similar sequences are listed in A316466.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = n*(3*n+1).
G.f.: 2*x*(2+x)/(1-x)^3.
Sum_{i=1..n} a(i) = A045991(n+1). - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 20 2006
a(n) = 2*A005449(n). - Omar E. Pol, Dec 18 2008
a(n) = a(n-1) + 6*n -2, n > 0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 06 2010
a(n) = A100104(n+1) - A100104(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 07 2012
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3) with a(0) = 0, a(1) = 4, a(2) = 14. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013
a(n) = A174709(6*n+3). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013
a(n) = (24/(n+2)!)*Sum_{j=0..n} (-1)^(n-j)*binomial(n,j)*j^(n+2). - Bruno Berselli, Jun 04 2013 - after the similar formula of Vladimir Kruchinin in A002411
a(n) = A002061(n+1) + A056220(n). - Bruce J. Nicholson, Sep 21 2017
a(n) = Sum_{i = 2..5} P(i,n), where P(i,m) = m*((i-2)*m-(i-4))/2. - Bruno Berselli, Jul 04 2018
E.g.f.: x*(4 + 3*x)*exp(x). - G. C. Greubel, Sep 01 2019
a(n) = A003215(n) - A005408(n). - Leo Tavares, Feb 25 2022
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 27 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 3 - Pi/(2*sqrt(3)) - 3*log(3)/2.
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = Pi/sqrt(3) + 2*log(2) - 3. (End)
a(n) = A001105(n) + A002378(n). - Torlach Rush, Jul 11 2022
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