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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A124900 Largest order of any solvable transitive Galois group for an irreducible polynomial of degree n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 6, 24, 20, 72, 42, 1152, 1296, 800, 110, 82944, 156, 3528, 155520, 7962624, 272, 2239488, 342, 159252480, 11757312, 225280, 506, 13759414272, 64000000, 1277952, 13060694016, 192631799808, 812, 48372940800
Offset: 1

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Author

Artur Jasinski, Nov 12 2006

Keywords

Comments

These transitive groups are in classification of MAGMA:
a(1)=1T1,a(2)=2T1,a(3)=3T2,a(4)=4T5,a(5)=5T3,a(6)=6T13,
a(7)=7T4,a(8)=8T47,a(9)=9T31,a(10)=10T33,a(11)=11T4,
a(12)=12T294,a(13)=13T6,a(14)=14T45,a(15)=15T87,
a(16)=16T1947,a(17)=17T5,a(18)=18T945,a(19)=19T6,
a(20)=20T1067,a(21)=21T142,a(22)=22T37,a(23)=23T5,
a(24)=24T24921,a(25)=25T179,a(26)=26T79,a(27)=27T2372,
a(28)=28T1773,a(29)=29T6,a(30)=30T5358.
Conjecture: The sequence a(prime(n)), which begins 2, 6, 20, 42, 110, 156, 272, 342, 506, 812, increases without bound. It appears that a(prime(n)) may equal prime(n)(prime(n)-1), which is A036689. - Artur Jasinski, Feb 26 2011

Examples

			a(9)=1296 because solvable Galois group T9_31 (in MAGMA's list) has order 1296
		

Crossrefs

Extensions

a(11)-a(30) from Artur Jasinski, Feb 26 2011
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