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.

A100778 Integer powers of primorial numbers.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, 30, 32, 36, 64, 128, 210, 216, 256, 512, 900, 1024, 1296, 2048, 2310, 4096, 7776, 8192, 16384, 27000, 30030, 32768, 44100, 46656, 65536, 131072, 262144, 279936, 510510, 524288, 810000, 1048576, 1679616, 2097152, 4194304, 5336100
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Amarnath Murthy, Nov 28 2004

Keywords

Comments

Smallest squarefree numbers or their powers with distinct prime signatures. Or least numbers with prime signatures (p*q*r*...)^k, where p,q,r,... are primes and k is a whole number.
Also Heinz numbers of uniform integer partitions whose union is an initial interval of positive integers. An integer partition is uniform if all parts appear with the same multiplicity. The Heinz number of an integer partition (y_1, ..., y_k) is prime(y_1) * ... * prime(y_k). The sequence of all uniform integer partitions whose Heinz numbers belong to the sequence begins: (1), (11), (12), (111), (1111), (123), (11111), (1122), (111111), (1111111), (1234), (111222), (11111111), (111111111), (112233), (1111111111). - Gus Wiseman, Dec 26 2018
From Amiram Eldar, Sep 26 2023: (Start)
Intersection of A025487 and A072774.
The distinct terms of A046523(A072774(n)) in ascending orders.
The k-th power of the n-th primorial number, A002110(n)^k, has (k+1)^n divisors which are the set of the (k+1)-free prime(n)-smooth numbers. (End)

Examples

			10 is not a term as 6 is a member with the same prime signature 10 > 6.
216 is a term as 216 = (2*3)^3. 243 is not a term as 32 represents that prime signature.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    unintQ[n_]:=And[SameQ@@Last/@FactorInteger[n],Length[FactorInteger[n]]==PrimePi[FactorInteger[n][[-1,1]]]];
    Select[Range[1000],unintQ] (* Gus Wiseman, Dec 26 2018 *)

Formula

Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 1 + Sum_{n>=1} 1/A057588(n) = 2.2397359032... - Amiram Eldar, Oct 20 2020; corrected by Hal M. Switkay and Amiram Eldar, Apr 12 2021

Extensions

More terms and simpler definition from Ray Chandler, Nov 29 2004