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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A360946 Number of Pythagorean quadruples with inradius n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 6, 10, 9, 19, 16, 25, 29, 27, 27, 56, 31, 51, 49, 61, 42, 91, 52, 71, 89, 86, 63, 142, 64, 95, 116, 132, 83, 153, 90, 144, 149, 133, 108, 238, 108, 162, 169, 171, 122, 284, 130, 219, 200, 196, 145, 340, 174, 201, 231, 239, 164, 364, 176, 314, 278, 256, 190, 399, 195, 281, 360, 330
Offset: 1

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Comments

A Pythagorean quadruple is a quadruple (a,b,c,d) of positive integers such that a^2 + b^2 + c^2 = d^2 with a <= b <= c. Its inradius is (a+b+c-d)/2, which is a positive integer.
For every positive integer n, there is at least one Pythagorean quadruple with inradius n.

Examples

			For n=1 the a(1)=1 solution is (1,2,2,3).
For n=2 the a(2)=3 solutions are (1,4,8,9), (2,3,6,7) and (2,4,4,6).
For n=3 the a(3)=6 solutions are (1,6,18,19), (2,5,14,15), (2,6,9,11), (3,4,12,13), (3,6,6,9) and (4,4,7,9).
		

References

  • J. M. Blanco Casado, J. M. Sánchez Muñoz, and M. A. Pérez García-Ortega, El Libro de las Ternas Pitagóricas, Preprint 2023.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    n=50;
    div={};suc={};A={};
    Do[A=Join[A,{Range[1,(1+1/Sqrt[3])q]}],{q,1,n}];
    Do[suc=Join[suc,{Length[div]}];div={};For [i=1,i<=Length[Extract[A,q]],i++,div=Join[div,Intersection[Divisors[q^2+(Extract[Extract[A,q],i]-q)^2],Range[2(Extract[Extract[A,q],i]-q),Sqrt[q^2+(Extract[Extract[A,q],i]-q)^2]]]]],{q,1,n}];suc=Rest[Join[suc,{Length[div]}]];matriz={{"q"," ","cuaternas"}};For[j=1,j<=n,j++,matriz=Join[matriz,{{j," ",Extract[suc,j]}}]];MatrixForm[Transpose[matriz]]
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