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 1-6 of 6 results.

A000058 Sylvester's sequence: a(n+1) = a(n)^2 - a(n) + 1, with a(0) = 2.

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 3, 7, 43, 1807, 3263443, 10650056950807, 113423713055421844361000443, 12864938683278671740537145998360961546653259485195807
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Also called Euclid numbers, because a(n) = a(0)*a(1)*...*a(n-1) + 1 for n>0, with a(0)=2. - Jonathan Sondow, Jan 26 2014
Another version of this sequence is given by A129871, which starts with 1, 2, 3, 7, 43, 1807, ... .
The greedy Egyptian representation of 1 is 1 = 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/7 + 1/43 + 1/1807 + ... .
Take a square. Divide it into 2 equal rectangles by drawing a horizontal line. Divide the upper rectangle into 2 squares. Now you can divide the lower one into another 2 squares, but instead of doing so draw a horizontal line below the first one so you obtain a (2+1 = 3) X 1 rectangle which can be divided in 3 squares. Now you have a 6 X 1 rectangle at the bottom. Instead of dividing it into 6 squares, draw another horizontal line so you obtain a (6+1 = 7) X 1 rectangle and a 42 X 1 rectangle left, etc. - Néstor Romeral Andrés, Oct 29 2001
More generally one may define f(1) = x_1, f(2) = x_2, ..., f(k) = x_k, f(n) = f(1)*...*f(n-1)+1 for n > k and natural numbers x_i (i = 1, ..., k) which satisfy gcd(x_i, x_j) = 1 for i <> j. By definition of the sequence we have that for each pair of numbers x, y from the sequence gcd(x, y) = 1. An interesting property of a(n) is that for n >= 2, 1/a(0) + 1/a(1) + 1/a(2) + ... + 1/a(n-1) = (a(n)-2)/(a(n)-1). Thus we can also write a(n) = (1/a(0) + 1/a(1) + 1/a(2) + ... + 1/a(n-1) - 2 )/( 1/a(0) + 1/a(1) + 1/a(2) + ... + 1/a(n-1) - 1). - Frederick Magata (frederick.magata(AT)uni-muenster.de), May 10 2001; [corrected by Michel Marcus, Mar 27 2019]
A greedy sequence: a(n+1) is the smallest integer > a(n) such that 1/a(0) + 1/a(1) + 1/a(2) + ... + 1/a(n+1) doesn't exceed 1. The sequence gives infinitely many ways of writing 1 as the sum of Egyptian fractions: Cut the sequence anywhere and decrement the last element. 1 = 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/6 = 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/7 + 1/42 = 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/7 + 1/43 + 1/1806 = ... . - Ulrich Schimke, Nov 17 2002; [corrected by Michel Marcus, Mar 27 2019]
Consider the mapping f(a/b) = (a^3 + b)/(a + b^3). Starting with a = 1, b = 2 and carrying out this mapping repeatedly on each new (reduced) rational number gives 1/2, 1/3, 4/28 = 1/7, 8/344 = 1/43, ..., i.e., 1/2, 1/3, 1/7, 1/43, 1/1807, ... . Sequence contains the denominators. Also the sum of the series converges to 1. - Amarnath Murthy, Mar 22 2003
a(1) = 2, then the smallest number == 1 (mod all previous terms). a(2n+6) == 443 (mod 1000) and a(2n+7) == 807 (mod 1000). - Amarnath Murthy, Sep 24 2003
An infinite coprime sequence defined by recursion.
Apart from the initial 2, a subsequence of A002061. It follows that no term is a square.
It appears that a(k)^2 + 1 divides a(k+1)^2 + 1. - David W. Wilson, May 30 2004. This is true since a(k+1)^2 + 1 = (a(k)^2 - a(k) + 1)^2 +1 = (a(k)^2-2*a(k)+2)*(a(k)^2 + 1) (a(k+1)=a(k)^2-a(k)+1 by definition). - Pab Ter (pabrlos(AT)yahoo.com), May 31 2004
In general, for any m > 0 coprime to a(0), the sequence a(n+1) = a(n)^2 - m*a(n) + m is infinite coprime (Mohanty). This sequence has (m,a(0))=(1,2); (2,3) is A000215; (1,4) is A082732; (3,4) is A000289; (4,5) is A000324.
Any prime factor of a(n) has -3 as its quadratic residue (Granville, exercise 1.2.3c in Pollack).
Note that values need not be prime, the first composites being 1807 = 13 * 139 and 10650056950807 = 547 * 19569939581. - Jonathan Vos Post, Aug 03 2008
If one takes any subset of the sequence comprising the reciprocals of the first n terms, with the condition that the first term is negated, then this subset has the property that the sum of its elements equals the product of its elements. Thus -1/2 = -1/2, -1/2 + 1/3 = -1/2 * 1/3, -1/2 + 1/3 + 1/7 = -1/2 * 1/3 * 1/7, -1/2 + 1/3 + 1/7 + 1/43 = -1/2 * 1/3 * 1/7 * 1/43, and so on. - Nick McClendon, May 14 2009
(a(n) + a(n+1)) divides a(n)*a(n+1)-1 because a(n)*a(n+1) - 1 = a(n)*(a(n)^2 - a(n) + 1) - 1 = a(n)^3 - a(n)^2 + a(n) - 1 = (a(n)^2 + 1)*(a(n) - 1) = (a(n) + a(n)^2 - a(n) + 1)*(a(n) - 1) = (a(n) + a(n+1))*(a(n) - 1). - Mohamed Bouhamida, Aug 29 2009
This sequence is also related to the short side (or hypotenuse) of adjacent right triangles, (3, 4, 5), (5, 12, 13), (13, 84, 85), ... by A053630(n) = 2*a(n) - 1. - Yuksel Yildirim, Jan 01 2013, edited by M. F. Hasler, May 19 2017
For n >= 4, a(n) mod 3000 alternates between 1807 and 2443. - Robert Israel, Jan 18 2015
The set of prime factors of a(n)'s is thin in the set of primes. Indeed, Odoni showed that the number of primes below x dividing some a(n) is O(x/(log x log log log x)). - Tomohiro Yamada, Jun 25 2018
Sylvester numbers when reduced modulo 864 form the 24-term arithmetic progression 7, 43, 79, 115, 151, 187, 223, 259, 295, 331, ..., 763, 799, 835 which repeats itself until infinity. This was first noticed in March 2018 and follows from the work of Sondow and MacMillan (2017) regarding primary pseudoperfect numbers which similarly form an arithmetic progression when reduced modulo 288. Giuga numbers also form a sequence resembling an arithmetic progression when reduced modulo 288. - Mehran Derakhshandeh, Apr 26 2019
Named after the English mathematician James Joseph Sylvester (1814-1897). - Amiram Eldar, Mar 09 2024
Guy askes if it is an irrationality sequence (see Guy, 1981). - Stefano Spezia, Oct 13 2024

Examples

			a(0)=2, a(1) = 2+1 = 3, a(2) = 2*3 + 1 = 7, a(3) = 2*3*7 + 1 = 43.
		

References

  • Graham Everest, Alf van der Poorten, Igor Shparlinski and Thomas Ward, Recurrence Sequences, Amer. Math. Soc., 2003; see esp. p. 255.
  • Steven R. Finch, Mathematical Constants, Cambridge, 2003, Section 6.7.
  • Ronald L. Graham, Donald E. Knuth and Oren Patashnik, Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 2nd. ed., 1994.
  • Richard K. Guy, Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, Springer, 1st edition, 1981. See section E24.
  • Richard K. Guy and Richard Nowakowski, Discovering primes with Euclid. Delta, Vol. 5 (1975), pp. 49-63.
  • Amarnath Murthy, Smarandache Reciprocal partition of unity sets and sequences, Smarandache Notions Journal, Vol. 11, 1-2-3, Spring 2000.
  • Amarnath Murthy and Charles Ashbacher, Generalized Partitions and Some New Ideas on Number Theory and Smarandache Sequences, Hexis, Phoenix; USA 2005. See Section 1.1.
  • 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. A005267, A000945, A000946, A005265, A005266, A075442, A007018, A014117, A054377, A002061, A118227, A126263, A007996 (primes dividing some term), A323605 (smallest prime divisors), A091335 (number of prime divisors), A129871 (a variant starting with 1).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a000058 0 = 2
    a000058 n = a000058 m ^ 2 - a000058 m + 1 where m = n - 1
    -- James Spahlinger, Oct 09 2012
    
  • Haskell
    a000058_list = iterate a002061 2  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 18 2013
    
  • Julia
    a(n) = n == 0 ? BigInt(2) : a(n - 1)*(a(n - 1) - 1) + 1
    [a(n) for n in 0:8] |> println # Peter Luschny, Dec 15 2020
  • Maple
    A[0]:= 2:
    for n from 1 to 12 do
    A[n]:= A[n-1]^2 - A[n-1]+1
    od:
    seq(A[i],i=0..12); # Robert Israel, Jan 18 2015
  • Mathematica
    a[0] = 2; a[n_] := a[n - 1]^2 - a[n - 1] + 1; Table[ a[ n ], {n, 0, 9} ]
    NestList[#^2-#+1&,2,10] (* Harvey P. Dale, May 05 2013 *)
    RecurrenceTable[{a[n + 1] == a[n]^2 - a[n] + 1, a[0] == 2}, a, {n, 0, 10}] (* Emanuele Munarini, Mar 30 2017 *)
  • Maxima
    a(n) := if n = 0 then 2 else a(n-1)^2-a(n-1)+1 $
    makelist(a(n),n,0,8); /* Emanuele Munarini, Mar 23 2017 */
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=if(n<1,2*(n>=0),1+a(n-1)*(a(n-1)-1))
    
  • PARI
    A000058(n,p=2)={for(k=1,n,p=(p-1)*p+1);p} \\ give Mod(2,m) as 2nd arg to calculate a(n) mod m. - M. F. Hasler, Apr 25 2014
    
  • PARI
    a=vector(20); a[1]=3; for(n=2, #a, a[n]=a[n-1]^2-a[n-1]+1); concat(2, a) \\ Altug Alkan, Apr 04 2018
    
  • Python
    A000058 = [2]
    for n in range(1, 10):
        A000058.append(A000058[n-1]*(A000058[n-1]-1)+1)
    # Chai Wah Wu, Aug 20 2014
    

Formula

a(n) = 1 + a(0)*a(1)*...*a(n-1).
a(n) = a(n-1)*(a(n-1)-1) + 1; Sum_{i>=0} 1/a(i) = 1. - Néstor Romeral Andrés, Oct 29 2001
Vardi showed that a(n) = floor(c^(2^(n+1)) + 1/2) where c = A076393 = 1.2640847353053011130795995... - Benoit Cloitre, Nov 06 2002 (But see the Aho-Sloane paper!)
a(n) = A007018(n+1)+1 = A007018(n+1)/A007018(n) [A007018 is a(n) = a(n-1)^2 + a(n-1), a(0)=1]. - Gerald McGarvey, Oct 11 2004
a(n) = sqrt(A174864(n+1)/A174864(n)). - Giovanni Teofilatto, Apr 02 2010
a(n) = A014117(n+1)+1 for n = 0,1,2,3,4; a(n) = A054377(n)+1 for n = 1,2,3,4. - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 07 2013
a(n) = f(1/(1-(1/a(0) + 1/a(1) + ... + 1/a(n-1)))) where f(x) is the smallest integer > x (see greedy algorithm above). - Robert FERREOL, Feb 22 2019
From Amiram Eldar, Oct 29 2020: (Start)
Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n/(a(n)-1) = A118227.
Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n/a(n) = 2 * A118227 - 1. (End)

A181503 Slowest-growing sequence of primes p where 1/(p+1) sums to 1 without actually reaching it.

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 29, 127, 1931, 309121, 47777896349, 76090912606600214447, 120621395443859821620817698234224534627, 63813688766771960235613705494151343867425896610637722399417500492543759703
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Aaron Meyerowitz, Oct 24 2010

Keywords

Comments

The sum of 1/(p+1) over p = 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 23 = A046689 is exactly 1.

Crossrefs

Similar to A075442. See also A046689.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    a[n_] := a[n] = Block[{sm = Sum[1/(a[i] + 1), {i, n - 1}]}, NextPrime[ Max[ a[n - 1], 1/(1 - sm)]]]; a[0] = 1; Array[a, 15] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Oct 27 2010 *)

Extensions

a(12) onwards from Robert G. Wilson v, Oct 27 2010

A225669 Slowest-growing sequence of odd primes whose reciprocals sum to 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 967, 101419, 2000490719, 106298338760698351, 586903266015193517540253132922939, 3494365451928289992209032562272585187947069047023572601254975717
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Jonathan Sondow, May 11 2013

Keywords

Comments

See comments, references, and links in A075442 = slowest-growing sequence of primes whose reciprocals sum to 1.
a(n) = 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 967, ..., so A225671(2) = 23.

Examples

			Since 1/3 + 1/5 + 1/7 + 1/11 + 1/13 + 1/17 + 1/19 + 1/23 < 1, the first eight odd primes are members. The ninth is not, because adding 1/29 pushes the sum over 1.
		

References

  • Popular Computing (Calabasas, CA), Problem 175: A Sum of a Different Kind, Vol. 5 (No. 50, May 1977), p. PC50-8.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    a[n_] := a[n] = Block[{sm = Sum[1/(a[i]), {i, n - 1}]}, NextPrime[ Max[ a[n - 1], 1/(1 - sm)]]]; a[0] = 2; Array[a, 14]

A046689 Primes p such that p+1 divides 24.

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 23
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Sum of 1/(p+1) is 1. - Aaron Meyerowitz, Oct 24 2010

Crossrefs

Cf. A075442. - Aaron Meyerowitz, Oct 24 2010

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Select[Prime[Range[9]],Divisible[24,#+1]&] (* Harvey P. Dale, Nov 03 2013 *)

A225671 Largest prime p(k) > p(n) such that 1/p(n) + 1/p(n+1) + ... + 1/p(k) < 1, where p(n) is the n-th prime.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 23, 107, 337, 853, 1621, 2971, 4919, 7757, 11657, 16103, 22193, 29251, 37699, 48523, 61051, 75479, 91459, 110563, 131641, 155501, 183581, 214177, 248593, 286063, 325883, 369979, 419449, 473647, 534029, 600623, 667531, 739523, 816769, 900997, 988651, 1083613
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Jonathan Sondow, May 11 2013

Keywords

Comments

a(n+1) > n^e, by Rosser's theorem p(n) > n*log(n). (In fact, it appears that a(n) > (n*log(n))^e.)
So sum_{n>0} 1/a(n) = 1/3 + 1/23 + 1/107 + ... = 0.39....

Examples

			a(1) = 3 because 1/2 + 1/3 < 1 < 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/5 (or because the slowest-growing sequence of primes whose reciprocals sum to 1 is A075442 = 2, 3, 7, ...).
a(2) = 23 because 1/3 + 1/5 + 1/7 + 1/11 + 1/13 + 1/17 + 1/19 + 1/23 < 1 < 1/3 + 1/5 + 1/7 + 1/11 + 1/13 + 1/17 + 1/19 + 1/23 + 1/29 (or because the slowest-growing sequence of odd primes whose reciprocals sum to 1 is A225669 = 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 967, ...).
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    L = {1}; n = 0; Do[ k = Last[L]; n++; While[ Sum[ 1/Prime[i], {i, n, k}] < 1, k++]; L = Append[L, k - 1], {22}]; Prime[ Rest[L]]
  • Python
    from sympy import prime
    def A225671(n):
        xn, xd, k, p = 1, prime(n), n, prime(n)
        while xn < xd:
            k += 1
            po, p = p, prime(k)
            xn = xn*p + xd
            xd *= p
        return po # Chai Wah Wu, Apr 20 2015

Extensions

a(23)-a(37) from Chai Wah Wu, Apr 20 2015

A225670 Slowest-growing sequence of odd primes p where 1/(p+1) sums to 1 without actually reaching it.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 53, 2539, 936599, 127852322431, 510819260848900502567, 1553192364608434843485965159509450536731, 52119893982548112392303882371161186032080710958633917215400463948724068502699
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Jonathan Sondow, May 11 2013

Keywords

Comments

Is there a finite set of odd primes p where 1/(p+1) sums exactly to 1? (This would be an analog of 1/(2+1) + 1/(3+1) + 1/(5+1) + 1/(7+1) + 1/(11+1) + 1/(23+1) = 1 -- see A000058.)

Crossrefs

Similar to A075442, A181503, A225669.
Cf. A000058.
See also A046689.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    a[n_] := a[n] = Block[ {sm = Sum[ 1/(a[i] + 1), {i, n - 1}]}, NextPrime[ Max[ a[n - 1], 1/(1 - sm)]]]; a[0] = 2; Array[ a, 20]
Showing 1-6 of 6 results.