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.

Showing 1-4 of 4 results.

A060087 Numbers k such that k^2 is a palindromic square with an asymmetric root.

Original entry on oeis.org

1109111, 110091011, 111091111, 10109901101, 10110911101, 11000910011, 11010911011, 11100910111, 1010099010101, 1010109110101, 1011099011101, 1100009100011, 1101009101011, 1110009100111, 100109990011001
Offset: 1

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Author

Patrick De Geest, Feb 15 2001

Keywords

Comments

With 'asymmetric' is meant almost palindromic with a 'core' (pseudo-palindromic). The core '09' when transformed into '1n' (n=-1) makes the base number palindromic. E.g., 1109111 is in fact 11_09_111 -> 11_(10-1)_111 -> 11_1n_111 -> 111n111 and palindromic. Similarly core 099 becomes 10n, core 0999 becomes 100n, etc.

References

  • M. Keith, "Classification and Enumeration of Palindromic Squares," Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 22:2, pp. 124-132, 1990.

Crossrefs

A007573 a(n) is the number of base numbers with 2n+1 digits in the asymmetric families of palindromic squares.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 5, 6, 9, 10, 10, 15, 15, 16, 18, 24, 18, 26, 24, 30, 27, 33, 28, 40, 33, 40, 35, 48, 37, 50, 42, 53, 45, 58, 46, 64, 50, 64, 54, 72, 55, 73, 60, 78, 63, 82, 63, 88, 69, 88, 72, 95, 73, 98, 78, 102, 80, 106, 82, 112, 87, 111, 90, 120, 91, 122, 95, 126, 99, 130, 100, 135
Offset: 3

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Author

Keywords

Examples

			a(3) = 1: The only base number of length 2*3 + 1 = 7 is 1109111 = A060087(1);
a(4) = 2 indicates the existence of two length 2*4 + 1 = 9 base numbers, 110091011 = A060087(2) and 111091111 = A060087(3).
		

References

  • M. Keith, Classification and enumeration of palindromic squares, J. Rec. Math., 22 (No. 2, 1990), 124-132.
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

Programs

  • PARI
    \\ see P. De Geest link.

Extensions

a(17)-a(31) from Sean A. Irvine, Jan 10 2018
Name and offset corrected by Hugo Pfoertner, Oct 04 2023
a(32)-a(70) from Hugo Pfoertner, Oct 07 2023

A059745 Palindromic squares of sporadic type.

Original entry on oeis.org

676, 69696, 94249, 698896, 5221225, 6948496, 522808225, 617323716, 942060249, 637832238736, 1086078706801, 1615108015161, 4051154511504, 5265533355625, 9420645460249, 123862676268321, 144678292876441, 165551171155561, 900075181570009, 4099923883299904, 94206450305460249
Offset: 1

Views

Author

N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 21 2001

Keywords

References

  • C. Ashbacher, More on palindromic squares, J. Rec. Math. 22, no. 2 (1990), 133-135. [A scan of the first page of this article is included with the last page of the Keith (1990) scan]
  • J. K. R. Barnett, "Tables of Square Palindromes in Bases 2 and 10," Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 23:1, pp. 13-18, 1991.
  • M. Keith, "Classification and Enumeration of Palindromic Squares," Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 22:2, pp. 124-132, 1990.
  • R. Ondrejka, "A Palindrome (151) of Palindromic Squares," Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 20:1, pp. 68-71, 1988.

Crossrefs

Formula

a(n) = A059744(n)^2. - Hugo Pfoertner, Oct 03 2023

Extensions

More terms from WorldOfNumbers website, communicated by Hugo Pfoertner, Oct 03 2023

A286138 Pseudo-palindromic numbers: not palindromes (A002113), but a nontrivial palindromic concatenation (AA or ABA) of arbitrary nonzero integers A and B.

Original entry on oeis.org

1010, 1101, 1121, 1131, 1141, 1151, 1161, 1171, 1181, 1191, 1201, 1211, 1212, 1231, 1241, 1251, 1261, 1271, 1281, 1291, 1301, 1311, 1313, 1321, 1341, 1351, 1361, 1371, 1381, 1391, 1401, 1411, 1414, 1421, 1431, 1451, 1461, 1471, 1481, 1491, 1501, 1511, 1515, 1521, 1531
Offset: 1

Views

Author

M. F. Hasler, May 03 2017

Keywords

Comments

The pseudo- or almost-palindromic numbers considered here are not related to the similarly named but different concepts mentioned in comments on A003555 and in A060087 - A060088.
We could consider "more general" palindromic concatenations like A.B.B.A, A.B.C.B.A, etc., but all of these can be written as A.B'.A with B' = B.B resp. B.C.B, etc. The result is non-palindromic (i.e., not in A002113) as required, if and only if at least one of the strings is non-palindromic.
Here, A is allowed to have only one digit, so most of the first 100 terms are of the form 1.B.1 where B = 10, 12, 13, ... (palindromes 11, 22, 33, ... excluded).
If all of the strings A, B (...) are required to be non-palindromic, the sequence starts with terms of the form A.A with A = 10, 12, 13, ..., 98: 1010, 1212, 1313, 1414, 1515, 1616, 1717, 1818, 1919, 2020, 2121, 2323, .... This is a subsequence of A239019 (numbers which are not primitive words over the alphabet {0,...,9} when written in base 10).

Programs

  • PARI
    A286138 = select(t->!is_A002113(t),setunion(vector(801,i,((i-1)\89+1)*1001+((i-1)%89+1)*10),vector(89,i,(i+9)*101))) \\ The first 810 terms.
Showing 1-4 of 4 results.