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.

A000244 Powers of 3: a(n) = 3^n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 9, 27, 81, 243, 729, 2187, 6561, 19683, 59049, 177147, 531441, 1594323, 4782969, 14348907, 43046721, 129140163, 387420489, 1162261467, 3486784401, 10460353203, 31381059609, 94143178827, 282429536481, 847288609443, 2541865828329, 7625597484987
Offset: 0

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Comments

Same as Pisot sequences E(1, 3), L(1, 3), P(1, 3), T(1, 3). Essentially same as Pisot sequences E(3, 9), L(3, 9), P(3, 9), T(3, 9). See A008776 for definitions of Pisot sequences.
Number of (s(0), s(1), ..., s(2n+2)) such that 0 < s(i) < 6 and |s(i) - s(i-1)| = 1 for i = 1, 2, ..., 2n + 2, s(0) = 1, s(2n+2) = 3. - Herbert Kociemba, Jun 10 2004
a(1) = 1, a(n+1) is the least number such that there are a(n) even numbers between a(n) and a(n+1). Generalization for the sequence of powers of k: 1, k, k^2, k^3, k^4, ... There are a(n) multiples of k-1 between a(n) and a(n+1). - Amarnath Murthy, Nov 28 2004
a(n) = sum of (n+1)-th row in Triangle A105728. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 18 2005
With p(n) being the number of integer partitions of n, p(i) being the number of parts of the i-th partition of n, d(i) being the number of different parts of the i-th partition of n, m(i, j) being the multiplicity of the j-th part of the i-th partition of n, Sum_{i = 1..p(n)} being the sum over i and Product_{j = 1..d(i)} being the product over j, one has: a(n) = Sum_{i = 1..p(n)} (p(i)!/(Product_{j = 1..d(i)} m(i, j)!))*2^(p(i) - 1). - Thomas Wieder, May 18 2005
For any k > 1 in the sequence, k is the first prime power appearing in the prime decomposition of repunit R_k, i.e., of A002275(k). - Lekraj Beedassy, Apr 24 2006
a(n-1) is the number of compositions of compositions. In general, (k+1)^(n-1) is the number of k-levels nested compositions (e.g., 4^(n-1) is the number of compositions of compositions of compositions, etc.). Each of the n - 1 spaces between elements can be a break for one of the k levels, or not a break at all. - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Dec 06 2006
Let S be a binary relation on the power set P(A) of a set A having n = |A| elements such that for every element x, y of P(A), xSy if x is a subset of y. Then a(n) = |S|. - Ross La Haye, Dec 22 2006
From Manfred Boergens, Mar 28 2023: (Start)
With regard to the comment by Ross La Haye:
Cf. A001047 if either nonempty subsets are considered or x is a proper subset of y.
Cf. a(n+1) in A028243 if nonempty subsets are considered and x is a proper subset of y. (End)
If X_1, X_2, ..., X_n is a partition of the set {1, 2, ..., 2*n} into blocks of size 2 then, for n >= 1, a(n) is equal to the number of functions f : {1, 2, ..., 2*n} -> {1, 2} such that for fixed y_1, y_2, ..., y_n in {1, 2} we have f(X_i) <> {y_i}, (i = 1, 2, ..., n). - Milan Janjic, May 24 2007
This is a general comment on all sequences of the form a(n) = [(2^k)-1]^n for all positive integers k. Example 1.1.16 of Stanley's "Enumerative Combinatorics" offers a slightly different version. a(n) in the number of functions f:[n] into P([k]) - {}. a(n) is also the number of functions f:[k] into P([n]) such that the generalized intersection of f(i) for all i in [k] is the empty set. Where [n] = {1, 2, ..., n}, P([n]) is the power set of [n] and {} is the empty set. - Geoffrey Critzer, Feb 28 2009
a(n) = A064614(A000079(n)) and A064614(m)A000079(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 08 2010
3^(n+1) = (1, 2, 2, 2, ...) dot (1, 1, 3, 9, ..., 3^n); e.g., 3^3 = 27 = (1, 2, 2, 2) dot (1, 1, 3, 9) = (1 + 2 + 6 + 18). - Gary W. Adamson, May 17 2010
a(n) is the number of generalized compositions of n when there are 3*2^i different types of i, (i = 1, 2, ...). - Milan Janjic, Sep 24 2010
For n >= 1, a(n-1) is the number of generalized compositions of n when there are 2^(i-1) different types of i, (i = 1, 2, ...). - Milan Janjic, Sep 24 2010
The sequence in question ("Powers of 3") also describes the number of moves of the k-th disk solving the [RED ; BLUE ; BLUE] or [RED ; RED ; BLUE] pre-colored Magnetic Tower of Hanoi puzzle (cf. A183111 - A183125).
a(n) is the number of Stern polynomials of degree n. See A057526. - T. D. Noe, Mar 01 2011
Positions of records in the number of odd prime factors, A087436. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Mar 17 2011
Sum of coefficients of the expansion of (1+x+x^2)^n. - Adi Dani, Jun 21 2011
a(n) is the number of compositions of n elements among {0, 1, 2}; e.g., a(2) = 9 since there are the 9 compositions 0 + 0, 0 + 1, 1 + 0, 0 + 2, 1 + 1, 2 + 0, 1 + 2, 2 + 1, and 2 + 2. [From Adi Dani, Jun 21 2011; modified by editors.]
Except the first two terms, these are odd numbers n such that no x with 2 <= x <= n - 2 satisfy x^(n-1) == 1 (mod n). - Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Jul 03 2011
The compositions of n in which each natural number is colored by one of p different colors are called p-colored compositions of n. For n >= 1, a(n) equals the number of 3-colored compositions of n such that no adjacent parts have the same color. - Milan Janjic, Nov 17 2011
Explanation from David Applegate, Feb 20 2017: (Start)
Since the preceding comment appears in a large number of sequences, it might be worth adding a proof.
The number of compositions of n into exactly k parts is binomial(n-1,k-1).
For a p-colored composition of n such that no adjacent parts have the same color, there are exactly p choices for the color of the first part, and p-1 choices for the color of each additional part (any color other than the color of the previous one). So, for a partition into k parts, there are p (p-1)^(k-1) valid colorings.
Thus the number of p-colored compositions of n into exactly k parts such that no adjacent parts have the same color is binomial(n-1,k-1) p (p-1)^(k-1).
The total number of p-colored compositions of n such that no adjacent parts have the same color is then
Sum_{k=1..n} binomial(n-1,k-1) * p * (p-1)^(k-1) = p^n.
To see this, note that the binomial expansion of ((p - 1) + 1)^(n - 1) = Sum_{k = 0..n - 1} binomial(n - 1, k) (p - 1)^k 1^(n - 1 - k) = Sum_{k = 1..n} binomial(n - 1, k - 1) (p - 1)^(k - 1).
(End)
Also, first and least element of the matrix [1, sqrt(2); sqrt(2), 2]^(n+1). - M. F. Hasler, Nov 25 2011
One-half of the row sums of the triangular version of A035002. - J. M. Bergot, Jun 10 2013
Form an array with m(0,n) = m(n,0) = 2^n; m(i,j) equals the sum of the terms to the left of m(i,j) and the sum of the terms above m(i,j), which is m(i,j) = Sum_{k=0..j-1} m(i,k) + Sum_{k=0..i-1} m(k,j). The sum of the terms in antidiagonal(n+1) = 4*a(n). - J. M. Bergot, Jul 10 2013
a(n) = A007051(n+1) - A007051(n), and A007051 are the antidiagonal sums of an array defined by m(0,k) = 1 and m(n,k) = Sum_{c = 0..k - 1} m(n, c) + Sum_{r = 0..n - 1} m(r, k), which is the sum of the terms to left of m(n, k) plus those above m(n, k). m(1, k) = A000079(k); m(2, k) = A045623(k + 1); m(k + 1, k) = A084771(k). - J. M. Bergot, Jul 16 2013
Define an array to have m(0,k) = 2^k and m(n,k) = Sum_{c = 0..k - 1} m(n, c) + Sum_{r = 0..n - 1} m(r, k), which is the sum of the terms to the left of m(n, k) plus those above m(n, k). Row n = 0 of the array comprises A000079, column k = 0 comprises A011782, row n = 1 comprises A001792. Antidiagonal sums of the array are a(n): 1 = 3^0, 1 + 2 = 3^1, 2 + 3 + 4 = 3^2, 4 + 7 + 8 + 8 = 3^3. - J. M. Bergot, Aug 02 2013
The sequence with interspersed zeros and o.g.f. x/(1 - 3*x^2), A(2*k) = 0, A(2*k + 1) = 3^k = a(k), k >= 0, can be called hexagon numbers. This is because the algebraic number rho(6) = 2*cos(Pi/6) = sqrt(3) of degree 2, with minimal polynomial C(6, x) = x^2 - 3 (see A187360, n = 6), is the length ratio of the smaller diagonal and the side in the hexagon. Hence rho(6)^n = A(n-1)*1 + A(n)*rho(6), in the power basis of the quadratic number field Q(rho(6)). One needs also A(-1) = 1. See also a Dec 02 2010 comment and the P. Steinbach reference given in A049310. - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 02 2013
Numbers k such that sigma(3k) = 3k + sigma(k). - Jahangeer Kholdi, Nov 23 2013
All powers of 3 are perfect totient numbers (A082897), since phi(3^n) = 2 * 3^(n - 1) for n > 0, and thus Sum_{i = 0..n} phi(3^i) = 3^n. - Alonso del Arte, Apr 20 2014
The least number k > 0 such that 3^k ends in n consecutive decreasing digits is a 3-term sequence given by {1, 13, 93}. The consecutive increasing digits are {3, 23, 123}. There are 100 different 3-digit endings for 3^k. There are no k-values such that 3^k ends in '012', '234', '345', '456', '567', '678', or '789'. The k-values for which 3^k ends in '123' are given by 93 mod 100. For k = 93 + 100*x, the digit immediately before the run of '123' is {9, 5, 1, 7, 3, 9, 5, 1, 3, 7, ...} for x = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, ...}, respectively. Thus we see the digit before '123' will never be a 0. So there are no further terms. - Derek Orr, Jul 03 2014
All elements of A^n where A = (1, 1, 1; 1, 1, 1; 1, 1, 1). - David Neil McGrath, Jul 23 2014
Counts all walks of length n (open or closed) on the vertices of a triangle containing a loop at each vertex starting from any given vertex. - David Neil McGrath, Oct 03 2014
a(n) counts walks (closed) on the graph G(1-vertex;1-loop,1-loop,1-loop). - David Neil McGrath, Dec 11 2014
2*a(n-2) counts all permutations of a solitary closed walk of length (n) from the vertex of a triangle that contains 2 loops on each of the remaining vertices. In addition, C(m,k)=2*(2^m)*B(m+k-2,m) counts permutations of walks that contain (m) loops and (k) arcs. - David Neil McGrath, Dec 11 2014
a(n) is the sum of the coefficients of the n-th layer of Pascal's pyramid (a.k.a., Pascal's tetrahedron - see A046816). - Bob Selcoe, Apr 02 2016
Numbers n such that the trinomial x^(2*n) + x^n + 1 is irreducible over GF(2). Of these only the trinomial for n=1 is primitive. - Joerg Arndt, May 16 2016
Satisfies Benford's law [Berger-Hill, 2011]. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 08 2017
a(n-1) is also the number of compositions of n if the parts can be runs of any length from 1 to n, and can contain any integers from 1 to n. - Gregory L. Simay, May 26 2017
Also the number of independent vertex sets and vertex covers in the n-ladder rung graph n P_2. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017
Also the number of (not necessarily maximal) cliques in the n-cocktail party graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Nov 29 2017
a(n-1) is the number of 2-compositions of n; see Hopkins & Ouvry reference. - Brian Hopkins, Aug 15 2020
a(n) is the number of faces of any dimension (vertices, edges, square faces, etc.) of the n-dimensional hypercube. For example, the 0-dimensional hypercube is a point, and its only face is itself. The 1-dimensional hypercube is a line, which has two vertices and an edge. The 2-dimensional hypercube is a square, which has four vertices, four edges, and a square face. - Kevin Long, Mar 14 2023
Number of pairs (A,B) of subsets of M={1,2,...,n} with union(A,B)=M. For nonempty subsets cf. A058481. - Manfred Boergens, Mar 28 2023
From Jianing Song, Sep 27 2023: (Start)
a(n) is the number of disjunctive clauses of n variables up to equivalence. A disjunctive clause is a propositional formula of the form l_1 OR ... OR l_m, where l_1, ..., l_m are distinct elements in {x_1, ..., x_n, NOT x_1, ..., NOT x_n} for n variables x_1, ... x_n, and no x_i and NOT x_i appear at the same time. For each 1 <= i <= n, we can have neither of x_i or NOT x_i, only x_i or only NOT x_i appearing in a disjunctive clause, so the number of such clauses is 3^n. Viewing the propositional formulas of n variables as functions {0,1}^n -> {0,1}, a disjunctive clause corresponds to a function f such that the inverse image of 0 is of the form A_1 X ... X A_n, where A_i is nonempty for all 1 <= i <= n. Since each A_i has 3 choices ({0}, {1} or {0,1}), we also find that the number of disjunctive clauses of n variables is 3^n.
Equivalently, a(n) is the number of conjunctive clauses of n variables. (End)
The finite subsequence a(2), a(3), a(4), a(5) = 9, 27, 81, 243 is one of only two geometric sequences that can be formed with all interior angles (all integer, in degrees) of a simple polygon. The other sequence is a subsequence of A007283 (see comment there). - Felix Huber, Feb 15 2024

Examples

			G.f. = 1 + 3*x + 9*x^2 + 27*x^3 + 81*x^4 + 243*x^5 + 729*x^6 + 2187*x^7 + ...
		

References

  • 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. A008776 (2*a(n), and first differences).
a(n) = A092477(n, 2) for n > 0.
a(n) = A159991(n) / A009964(n).
Cf. A100772, A035002. Row sums of A125076 and A153279.
a(n) = A217764(0, n).
Cf. A046816, A006521, A014945, A275414 (multisets).
The following are parallel families: A000079 (2^n), A004094 (2^n reversed), A028909 (2^n sorted up), A028910 (2^n sorted down), A036447 (double and reverse), A057615 (double and sort up), A263451 (double and sort down); A000244 (3^n), A004167 (3^n reversed), A321540 (3^n sorted up), A321539 (3^n sorted down), A163632 (triple and reverse), A321542 (triple and sort up), A321541 (triple and sort down).

Programs

Formula

a(n) = 3^n.
a(0) = 1; a(n) = 3*a(n-1).
G.f.: 1/(1-3*x).
E.g.f.: exp(3*x).
a(n) = n!*Sum_{i + j + k = n, i, j, k >= 0} 1/(i!*j!*k!). - Benoit Cloitre, Nov 01 2002
a(n) = Sum_{k = 0..n} 2^k*binomial(n, k), binomial transform of A000079.
a(n) = A090888(n, 2). - Ross La Haye, Sep 21 2004
a(n) = 2^(2n) - A005061(n). - Ross La Haye, Sep 10 2005
a(n) = A112626(n, 0). - Ross La Haye, Jan 11 2006
Hankel transform of A007854. - Philippe Deléham, Nov 26 2006
a(n) = 2*StirlingS2(n+1,3) + StirlingS2(n+2,2) = 2*(StirlingS2(n+1,3) + StirlingS2(n+1,2)) + 1. - Ross La Haye, Jun 26 2008
a(n) = 2*StirlingS2(n+1, 3) + StirlingS2(n+2, 2) = 2*(StirlingS2(n+1, 3) + StirlingS2(n+1, 2)) + 1. - Ross La Haye, Jun 09 2008
Sum_{n >= 0} 1/a(n) = 3/2. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 29 2008
If p(i) = Fibonacci(2i-2) and if A is the Hessenberg matrix of order n defined by A(i, j) = p(j-i+1), (i <= j), A(i, j) = -1, (i = j+1), and A(i, j) = 0 otherwise, then, for n >= 1, a(n-1) = det A. - Milan Janjic, May 08 2010
G.f. A(x) = M(x)/(1-M(x))^2, M(x) - o.g.f for Motzkin numbers (A001006). - Vladimir Kruchinin, Aug 18 2010
a(n) = A133494(n+1). - Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Jul 27 2011
2/3 + 3/3^2 + 2/3^3 + 3/3^4 + 2/3^5 + ... = 9/8. [Jolley, Summation of Series, Dover, 1961]
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} A207543(n,k)*4^(n-k). - Philippe Deléham, Feb 25 2012
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} A125185(n,k). - Philippe Deléham, Feb 26 2012
Sum_{n > 0} Mobius(n)/a(n) = 0.181995386702633887827... (see A238271). - Alonso del Arte, Aug 09 2012. See also the sodium 3s orbital energy in table V of J. Chem. Phys. 53 (1970) 348.
a(n) = (tan(Pi/3))^(2*n). - Bernard Schott, May 06 2022
a(n-1) = binomial(2*n-1, n) + Sum_{k >= 1} binomial(2*n, n+3*k)*(-1)^k. - Greg Dresden, Oct 14 2022
G.f.: Sum_{k >= 0} x^k/(1-2*x)^(k+1). - Kevin Long, Mar 14 2023

A028387 a(n) = n + (n+1)^2.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 5, 11, 19, 29, 41, 55, 71, 89, 109, 131, 155, 181, 209, 239, 271, 305, 341, 379, 419, 461, 505, 551, 599, 649, 701, 755, 811, 869, 929, 991, 1055, 1121, 1189, 1259, 1331, 1405, 1481, 1559, 1639, 1721, 1805, 1891, 1979, 2069, 2161, 2255, 2351, 2449, 2549, 2651
Offset: 0

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Comments

a(n+1) is the least k > a(n) + 1 such that A000217(a(n)) + A000217(k) is a square. - David Wasserman, Jun 30 2005
Values of Fibonacci polynomial n^2 - n - 1 for n = 2, 3, 4, 5, ... - Artur Jasinski, Nov 19 2006
A127701 * [1, 2, 3, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Jan 24 2007
Row sums of triangle A135223. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 23 2007
Equals row sums of triangle A143596. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 26 2008
a(n-1) gives the number of n X k rectangles on an n X n chessboard (for k = 1, 2, 3, ..., n). - Aaron Dunigan AtLee, Feb 13 2009
sqrt(a(0) + sqrt(a(1) + sqrt(a(2) + sqrt(a(3) + ...)))) = sqrt(1 + sqrt(5 + sqrt(11 + sqrt(19 + ...)))) = 2. - Miklos Kristof, Dec 24 2009
When n + 1 is prime, a(n) gives the number of irreducible representations of any nonabelian group of order (n+1)^3. - Andrew Rupinski, Mar 17 2010
a(n) = A176271(n+1, n+1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 13 2010
The product of any 4 consecutive integers plus 1 is a square (see A062938); the terms of this sequence are the square roots. - Harvey P. Dale, Oct 19 2011
Or numbers not expressed in the form m + floor(sqrt(m)) with integer m. - Vladimir Shevelev, Apr 09 2012
Left edge of the triangle in A214604: a(n) = A214604(n+1,1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 25 2012
Another expression involving phi = (1 + sqrt(5))/2 is a(n) = (n + phi)(n + 1 - phi). Therefore the numbers in this sequence, even if they are prime in Z, are not prime in Z[phi]. - Alonso del Arte, Aug 03 2013
a(n-1) = n*(n+1) - 1, n>=0, with a(-1) = -1, gives the values for a*c of indefinite binary quadratic forms [a, b, c] of discriminant D = 5 for b = 2*n+1. In general D = b^2 - 4ac > 0 and the form [a, b, c] is a*x^2 + b*x*y + c*y^2. - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 15 2013
a(n) has prime factors given by A038872. - Richard R. Forberg, Dec 10 2014
A253607(a(n)) = -1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 05 2015
An example of a quadratic sequence for which the continued square root map (see A257574) produces the number 2. There are infinitely many sequences with this property - another example is A028387. See Popular Computing link. - N. J. A. Sloane, May 03 2015
Left edge of the triangle in A260910: a(n) = A260910(n+2,1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 04 2015
Numbers m such that 4m+5 is a square. - Bruce J. Nicholson, Jul 19 2017
The numbers represented as 131 in base n: 131_4 = 29, 131_5 = 41, ... . If 'digits' larger than the base are allowed then 131_2 = 11 and 131_1 = 5 also. - Ron Knott, Nov 14 2017
From Klaus Purath, Mar 18 2019: (Start)
Let m be a(n) or a prime factor of a(n). Then, except for 1 and 5, there are, if m is a prime, exactly two squares y^2 such that the difference y^2 - m contains exactly one pair of factors {x,z} such that the following applies: x*z = y^2 - m, x + y = z with
x < y, where {x,y,z} are relatively prime numbers. {x,y,z} are the initial values of a sequence of the Fibonacci type. Thus each a(n) > 5, if it is a prime, and each prime factor p > 5 of an a(n) can be assigned to exactly two sequences of the Fibonacci type. a(0) = 1 belongs to the original Fibonacci sequence and a(1) = 5 to the Lucas sequence.
But also the reverse assignment applies. From any sequence (f(i)) of the Fibonacci type we get from its 3 initial values by f(i)^2 - f(i-1)*f(i+1) with f(i-1) < f(i) a term a(n) or a prime factor p of a(n). This relation is also valid for any i. In this case we get the absolute value |a(n)| or |p|. (End)
a(n-1) = 2*T(n) - 1, for n>=1, with T = A000217, is a proper subsequence of A089270, and the terms are 0,-1,+1 (mod 5). - Wolfdieter Lang, Jul 05 2019
a(n+1) is the number of wedged n-dimensional spheres in the homotopy of the neighborhood complex of Kneser graph KG_{2,n}. Here, KG_{2,n} is a graph whose vertex set is the collection of subsets of cardinality 2 of set {1,2,...,n+3,n+4} and two vertices are adjacent if and only if they are disjoint. - Anurag Singh, Mar 22 2021
Also the number of squares between (n+2)^2 and (n+2)^4. - Karl-Heinz Hofmann, Dec 07 2021
(x, y, z) = (A001105(n+1), -a(n-1), -a(n)) are solutions of the Diophantine equation x^3 + 4*y^3 + 4*z^3 = 8. - XU Pingya, Apr 25 2022
The least significant digit of terms of this sequence cycles through 1, 5, 1, 9, 9. - Torlach Rush, Jun 05 2024

Examples

			From _Ilya Gutkovskiy_, Apr 13 2016: (Start)
Illustration of initial terms:
                                        o               o
                        o           o   o o           o o
            o       o   o o       o o   o o o       o o o
    o   o   o o   o o   o o o   o o o   o o o o   o o o o
o   o o o   o o o o o   o o o o o o o   o o o o o o o o o
n=0  n=1       n=2           n=3               n=4
(End)
From _Klaus Purath_, Mar 18 2019: (Start)
Examples:
a(0) = 1: 1^1-0*1 = 1, 0+1 = 1 (Fibonacci A000045).
a(1) = 5: 3^2-1*4 = 5, 1+3 = 4 (Lucas A000032).
a(2) = 11: 4^2-1*5 = 11, 1+4 = 5 (A000285); 5^2-2*7 = 11, 2+5 = 7 (A001060).
a(3) = 19: 5^2-1*6 = 19, 1+5 = 6 (A022095); 7^2-3*10 = 19, 3+7 = 10 (A022120).
a(4) = 29: 6^2-1*7 = 29, 1+6 = 7 (A022096); 9^2-4*13 = 29, 4+9 = 13 (A022130).
a(11)/5 = 31: 7^2-2*9 = 31, 2+7 = 9 (A022113); 8^2-3*11 = 31, 3+8 = 11 (A022121).
a(24)/11 = 59: 9^2-2*11 = 59, 2+9 = 11 (A022114); 12^2-5*17 = 59, 5+12 = 17 (A022137).
(End)
		

Crossrefs

Complement of A028392. Third column of array A094954.
Cf. A000217, A002522, A062392, A062786, A127701, A135223, A143596, A052905, A162997, A062938 (squares of this sequence).
A110331 and A165900 are signed versions.
Cf. A002327 (primes), A094210.
Frobenius number for k successive numbers: this sequence (k=2), A079326 (k=3), A138984 (k=4), A138985 (k=5), A138986 (k=6), A138987 (k=7), A138988 (k=8).

Programs

Formula

a(n) = sqrt(A062938(n)). - Floor van Lamoen, Oct 08 2001
a(0) = 1, a(1) = 5, a(n) = (n+1)*a(n-1) - (n+2)*a(n-2) for n > 1. - Gerald McGarvey, Sep 24 2004
a(n) = A105728(n+2, n+1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 18 2005
a(n) = A109128(n+2, 2). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jun 20 2005
a(n) = 2*T(n+1) - 1, where T(n) = A000217(n). - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 15 2007
a(n) = A005408(n) + A002378(n); A084990(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} a(k). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 20 2007
Binomial transform of [1, 4, 2, 0, 0, 0, ...] = (1, 5, 11, 19, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 20 2007
G.f.: (1+2*x-x^2)/(1-x)^3. a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3). - R. J. Mathar, Jul 11 2009
a(n) = (n + 2 + 1/phi) * (n + 2 - phi); where phi = 1.618033989... Example: a(3) = 19 = (5 + .6180339...) * (3.381966...). Cf. next to leftmost column in A162997 array. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 23 2009
a(n) = a(n-1) + 2*(n+1), with n > 0, a(0) = 1. - Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 18 2010
For k < n, a(n) = (k+1)*a(n-k) - k*a(n-k-1) + k*(k+1); e.g., a(5) = 41 = 4*11 - 3*5 + 3*4. - Charlie Marion, Jan 13 2011
a(n) = lower right term in M^2, M = the 2 X 2 matrix [1, n; 1, (n+1)]. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 29 2011
G.f.: (x^2-2*x-1)/(x-1)^3 = G(0) where G(k) = 1 + x*(k+1)*(k+4)/(1 - 1/(1 + (k+1)*(k+4)/G(k+1))); (continued fraction, 3-step). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Oct 16 2012
Sum_{n>0} 1/a(n) = 1 + Pi*tan(sqrt(5)*Pi/2)/sqrt(5). - Enrique Pérez Herrero, Oct 11 2013
E.g.f.: exp(x) (1+4*x+x^2). - Tom Copeland, Dec 02 2013
a(n) = A005408(A000217(n)). - Tony Foster III, May 31 2016
From Amiram Eldar, Jan 29 2021: (Start)
Product_{n>=0} (1 + 1/a(n)) = -Pi*sec(sqrt(5)*Pi/2).
Product_{n>=1} (1 - 1/a(n)) = -Pi*sec(sqrt(5)*Pi/2)/6. (End)
a(5*n+1)/5 = A062786(n+1). - Torlach Rush, Jun 05 2024

Extensions

Minor edits by N. J. A. Sloane, Jul 04 2010, following suggestions from the Sequence Fans Mailing List

A083329 a(0) = 1; for n > 0, a(n) = 3*2^(n-1) - 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 5, 11, 23, 47, 95, 191, 383, 767, 1535, 3071, 6143, 12287, 24575, 49151, 98303, 196607, 393215, 786431, 1572863, 3145727, 6291455, 12582911, 25165823, 50331647, 100663295, 201326591, 402653183, 805306367, 1610612735, 3221225471, 6442450943
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Paul Barry, Apr 27 2003

Keywords

Comments

Apart from leading term (which should really be 3/2), same as A055010.
Binomial transform of A040001. Inverse binomial transform of A053156.
a(n) = A105728(n+1,2). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 18 2005
Row sums of triangle A133567. - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 16 2007
Row sums of triangle A135226. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 23 2007
a(n) = number of partitions Pi of [n+1] (in standard increasing form) such that the permutation Flatten[Pi] avoids the patterns 2-1-3 and 3-1-2. Example: a(3)=11 counts all 15 partitions of [4] except 13/24, 13/2/4 which contain a 2-1-3 and 14/23, 14/2/3 which contain a 3-1-2. Here "standard increasing form" means the entries are increasing in each block and the blocks are arranged in increasing order of their first entries. - David Callan, Jul 22 2008
An elephant sequence, see A175654. For the corner squares four A[5] vectors, with decimal values 42, 138, 162, 168, lead to this sequence. For the central square these vectors lead to the companion sequence A003945. - Johannes W. Meijer, Aug 15 2010
The binary representation of a(n) has n+1 digits, where all digits are 1's except digit n-1. For example: a(4) = 23 = 10111 (2). - Omar E. Pol, Dec 02 2012
Row sums of triangle A209561. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 26 2012
If a Stern's sequence based enumeration system of positive irreducible fractions is considered (for example, A007305/A047679, A162909/A162910, A071766/A229742, A245325/A245326, ...), and if it is organized by blocks or levels (n) with 2^n terms (n >= 0), and the fractions, term by term, are summed at each level n, then the resulting sequence of integers is a(n) + 1/2, apart from leading term (which should be 1/2). - Yosu Yurramendi, May 23 2015
For n >= 2, A083329(n) in binary representation is a string [101..1], also 10 followed with (n-1) 1's. For n >= 3, A036563(n) in binary representation is a string [1..101], also (n-2) 1's followed with 01. Thus A083329(n) is a reflection of the binary representation of A036563(n+1). Example: A083329(5) = 101111 in binary, A036563(6) = 111101 in binary. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Nov 06 2018
For n > 0, a(n) is the minimum number of turns in (n+1)-dimensional Euclidean space needed to visit all 2^(n+1) vertices of the (n+1)-cube (e.g., {0,1}^(n+1)) and return to the starting point, moving along straight-line segments between turns (turns may occur elsewhere in R^(n+1)). - Marco Ripà, Aug 14 2025

Examples

			a(0) = (3*2^0 - 2 + 0^0)/2 = 2/2 = 1 (use 0^0=1).
		

Crossrefs

Essentially the same as A055010 and A052940.
Cf. A007505 (primes).
Cf. A266550 (independence number of the n-Mycielski graph).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a083329 n = a083329_list !! n
    a083329_list = 1 : iterate ((+ 1) . (* 2)) 2
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 26 2012, Feb 22 2012
    
  • Magma
    [1] cat [3*2^(n-1)-1: n in [1..40]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Jan 01 2016
  • Maple
    seq(ceil((2^i+2^(i+1)-2)/2), i=0..31); # Zerinvary Lajos, Oct 02 2007
  • Mathematica
    a[1] = 2; a[n_] := 2a[n - 1] + 1; Table[ a[n], {n, 31}] (* Robert G. Wilson v, May 04 2004 *)
    Join[{1}, LinearRecurrence[{3, -2}, {2, 5}, 40]] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Jan 01 2016 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=(3*2^n-2+0^n)/2 \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Sep 24 2015
    

Formula

a(n) = (3*2^n - 2 + 0^n)/2.
G.f.: (1-x+x^2)/((1-x)*(1-2*x)). [corrected by Martin Griffiths, Dec 01 2009]
E.g.f.: (3*exp(2*x) - 2*exp(x) + exp(0))/2.
a(0) = 1, a(n) = sum of all previous terms + n. - Amarnath Murthy, Jun 20 2004
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 2*a(n-2) for n > 2, a(0)=1, a(1)=2, a(2)=5. - Philippe Deléham, Nov 29 2013
From Bob Selcoe, Apr 25 2014: (Start)
a(n) = (...((((((1)+1)*2+1)*2+1)*2+1)*2+1)...), with n+1 1's, n >= 0.
a(n) = 2*a(n-1) + 1, n >= 2.
a(n) = 2^n + 2^(n-1) - 1, n >= 2. (End)
a(n) = A086893(n) + A061547(n+1), n > 0. - Yosu Yurramendi, Jan 16 2017

A013609 Triangle of coefficients in expansion of (1+2*x)^n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 4, 4, 1, 6, 12, 8, 1, 8, 24, 32, 16, 1, 10, 40, 80, 80, 32, 1, 12, 60, 160, 240, 192, 64, 1, 14, 84, 280, 560, 672, 448, 128, 1, 16, 112, 448, 1120, 1792, 1792, 1024, 256, 1, 18, 144, 672, 2016, 4032, 5376, 4608, 2304, 512, 1, 20, 180, 960, 3360, 8064, 13440, 15360, 11520, 5120, 1024
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

T(n,k) is the number of lattice paths from (0,0) to (n,k) with steps (1,0) and two kinds of steps (1,1). The number of paths with steps (1,0) and s kinds of steps (1,1) corresponds to the expansion of (1+s*x)^n. - Joerg Arndt, Jul 01 2011
Also sum of rows in A046816. - Lior Manor, Apr 24 2004
Also square array of unsigned coefficients of Chebyshev polynomials of second kind. - Philippe Deléham, Aug 12 2005
The rows give the number of k-simplices in the n-cube. For example, 1, 6, 12, 8 shows that the 3-cube has 1 volume, 6 faces, 12 edges and 8 vertices. - Joshua Zucker, Jun 05 2006
Triangle whose (i, j)-th entry is binomial(i, j)*2^j.
With offset [1,1] the triangle with doubled numbers, 2*a(n,m), enumerates sequences of length m with nonzero integer entries n_i satisfying sum(|n_i|) <= n. Example n=4, m=2: [1,3], [3,1], [2,2] each in 2^2=4 signed versions: 2*a(4,2) = 2*6 = 12. The Sum over m (row sums of 2*a(n,m)) gives 2*3^(n-1), n >= 1. See the W. Lang comment and a K. A. Meissner reference under A024023. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jan 21 2008
n-th row of the triangle = leftmost column of nonzero terms of X^n, where X = an infinite bidiagonal matrix with (1,1,1,...) in the main diagonal and (2,2,2,...) in the subdiagonal. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 19 2008
Numerators of a matrix square-root of Pascal's triangle A007318, where the denominators for the n-th row are set to 2^n. - Gerald McGarvey, Aug 20 2009
From Johannes W. Meijer, Sep 22 2010: (Start)
The triangle sums (see A180662 for their definitions) link the Pell-Jacobsthal triangle, whose mirror image is A038207, with twenty-four different sequences; see the crossrefs.
This triangle may very well be called the Pell-Jacobsthal triangle in view of the fact that A000129 (Kn21) are the Pell numbers and A001045 (Kn11) the Jacobsthal numbers.
(End)
T(n,k) equals the number of n-length words on {0,1,2} having n-k zeros. - Milan Janjic, Jul 24 2015
T(n-1,k-1) is the number of 2-compositions of n with zeros having k positive parts; see Hopkins & Ouvry reference. - Brian Hopkins, Aug 16 2020
T(n,k) is the number of chains 0=x_0Geoffrey Critzer, Oct 01 2022
Excluding the initial 1, T(n,k) is the number of k-faces of a regular n-cross polytope. See A038207 for n-cube and A135278 for n-simplex. - Mohammed Yaseen, Jan 14 2023

Examples

			Triangle begins:
  1;
  1,  2;
  1,  4,   4;
  1,  6,  12,    8;
  1,  8,  24,   32,   16;
  1, 10,  40,   80,   80,    32;
  1, 12,  60,  160,  240,   192,    64;
  1, 14,  84,  280,  560,   672,   448,    128;
  1, 16, 112,  448, 1120,  1792,  1792,   1024,    256;
  1, 18, 144,  672, 2016,  4032,  5376,   4608,   2304,    512;
  1, 20, 180,  960, 3360,  8064, 13440,  15360,  11520,   5120,  1024;
  1, 22, 220, 1320, 5280, 14784, 29568,  42240,  42240,  28160, 11264,  2048;
  1, 24, 264, 1760, 7920, 25344, 59136, 101376, 126720, 112640, 67584, 24576, 4096;
From _Peter Bala_, Apr 20 2012: (Start)
The triangle can be written as the matrix product A038207*(signed version of A013609).
  |.1................||.1..................|
  |.2...1............||-1...2..............|
  |.4...4...1........||.1..-4...4..........|
  |.8..12...6...1....||-1...6...-12...8....|
  |16..32..24...8...1||.1..-8....24.-32..16|
  |..................||....................|
(End)
		

References

  • B. N. Cyvin et al., Isomer enumeration of unbranched catacondensed polygonal systems with pentagons and heptagons, Match, No. 34 (Oct 1996), pp. 109-121.
  • G. Hotz, Zur Reduktion von Schaltkreispolynomen im Hinblick auf eine Verwendung in Rechenautomaten, El. Datenverarbeitung, Folge 5 (1960), pp. 21-27.

Crossrefs

Cf. A007318, A013610, etc.
Appears in A167580 and A167591. - Johannes W. Meijer, Nov 23 2009
From Johannes W. Meijer, Sep 22 2010: (Start)
Triangle sums (see the comments): A000244 (Row1); A000012 (Row2); A001045 (Kn11); A026644 (Kn12); 4*A011377 (Kn13); A000129 (Kn21); A094706 (Kn22); A099625 (Kn23); A001653 (Kn3); A007583 (Kn4); A046717 (Fi1); A007051 (Fi2); A077949 (Ca1); A008998 (Ca2); A180675 (Ca3); A092467 (Ca4); A052942 (Gi1); A008999 (Gi2); A180676 (Gi3); A180677 (Gi4); A140413 (Ze1); A180678 (Ze2); A097117 (Ze3); A055588 (Ze4).
(End)
T(2n,n) gives A059304.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a013609 n = a013609_list !! n
    a013609_list = concat $ iterate ([1,2] *) [1]
    instance Num a => Num [a] where
       fromInteger k = [fromInteger k]
       (p:ps) + (q:qs) = p + q : ps + qs
       ps + qs         = ps ++ qs
       (p:ps) * qs'@(q:qs) = p * q : ps * qs' + [p] * qs
        *                = []
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 02 2011
    
  • Haskell
    a013609 n k = a013609_tabl !! n !! k
    a013609_row n = a013609_tabl !! n
    a013609_tabl = iterate (\row -> zipWith (+) ([0] ++ row) $
                                    zipWith (+) ([0] ++ row) (row ++ [0])) [1]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 22 2013, Feb 27 2013
    
  • Magma
    [2^k*Binomial(n,k): k in [0..n], n in [0..15]]; // G. C. Greubel, Sep 17 2021
    
  • Maple
    bin2:=proc(n,k) option remember; if k<0 or k>n then 0 elif k=0 then 1 else 2*bin2(n-1,k-1)+bin2(n-1,k); fi; end; # N. J. A. Sloane, Jun 01 2009
  • Mathematica
    Flatten[Table[CoefficientList[(1 + 2*x)^n, x], {n, 0, 10}]][[1 ;; 59]] (* Jean-François Alcover, May 17 2011 *)
    BinomialROW[n_, k_, t_] := Sum[Binomial[n, k]*Binomial[k, j]*(-1)^(k - j)*t^j, {j, 0, k}]; Column[Table[BinomialROW[n, k, 3], {n, 0, 10}, {k, 0, n}], Center] (* Kolosov Petro, Jan 28 2019 *)
  • Maxima
    a(n,k):=coeff(expand((1+2*x)^n),x^k);
    create_list(a(n,k),n,0,6,k,0,n); /* Emanuele Munarini, Nov 21 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    /* same as in A092566 but use */
    steps=[[1,0], [1,1], [1,1]]; /* note double [1,1] */
    /* Joerg Arndt, Jul 01 2011 */
    
  • Sage
    flatten([[2^k*binomial(n,k) for k in (0..n)] for n in (0..15)]) # G. C. Greubel, Sep 17 2021

Formula

G.f.: 1 / (1 - x*(1+2*y)).
T(n,k) = 2^k*binomial(n,k).
T(n,k) = 2*T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k). - Jon Perry, Nov 22 2005
Row sums are 3^n = A000244(n). - Joerg Arndt, Jul 01 2011
T(n,k) = Sum_{i=n-k..n} C(i,n-k)*C(n,i). - Mircea Merca, Apr 28 2012
E.g.f.: exp(2*y*x + x). - Geoffrey Critzer, Nov 12 2012
Riordan array (x/(1 - x), 2*x/(1 - x)). Exp(2*x) * e.g.f. for row n = e.g.f. for diagonal n. For example, for n = 3 we have exp(2*x)*(1 + 6*x + 12*x^2/2! + 8*x^3/3!) = 1 + 8*x + 40*x^2/2! + 160*x^3/3! + 560*x^4/4! + .... The same property holds more generally for Riordan arrays of the form (f(x), 2*x/(1 - x)). - Peter Bala, Dec 21 2014
T(n,k) = Sum_{j=0..k} (-1)^(k-j) * binomial(n,k) * binomial(k,j) * 3^j. - Kolosov Petro, Jan 28 2019
T(n,k) = 2*(n+1-k)*T(n,k-1)/k, T(n,0) = 1. - Alexander R. Povolotsky, Oct 08 2023
For n >= 1, GCD(T(n,1), ..., T(n,n)) = GCD(T(n,1),T(n,n)) = GCD(2*n,2^n) = A171977(n). - Pontus von Brömssen, Nov 01 2024

A228576 A triangle formed like generalized Pascal's triangle. The rule is T(n,k) = 2*T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k), the left border is n and the right border is n^2 instead of 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 7, 10, 9, 4, 13, 24, 29, 16, 5, 21, 50, 77, 74, 25, 6, 31, 92, 177, 228, 173, 36, 7, 43, 154, 361, 582, 629, 382, 49, 8, 57, 240, 669, 1304, 1793, 1640, 813, 64, 9, 73, 354, 1149, 2642, 4401, 5226, 4093, 1690, 81, 10, 91, 500, 1857, 4940, 9685, 14028, 14545, 9876, 3461, 100
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Boris Putievskiy, Aug 26 2013

Keywords

Examples

			The start of the sequence as triangle array read by rows:
  0;
  1,  1;
  2,  3,  4;
  3,  7, 10,  9;
  4, 13, 24, 29, 16;
  5, 21, 50, 77, 74, 25;
...
		

Crossrefs

Cf. We denote generalized Pascal's like triangle with coefficients a, b and with L(n) on the left border and R(n) on the right border by (a,b,L(n),R(n)). The list of sequences for (1,1,L(n),R(n)) see A228196;
A038207 (1,2,2^n,1), A105728 (1, 2, 1, n+1), A112468 (1,-1,1,1), A112626 (1,2,3^n,1), A119258 (2,1,1,1), A119673 (3,1,1,1), A119725 (3,2,1,1), A119726 (4,2,1,1), A119727 (5,2,1,1), A209705 (2,1,n+1,0);
A002061 (column 2), A000244 (sums of rows r of triangle array - (r-2)(r+1)/2).

Programs

  • GAP
    T:= function(n,k)
        if k=0 then return n;
        elif k=n then return n^2;
        else return 2*T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k);
        fi;
      end;
    Flat(List([0..12], n-> List([0..n], k-> T(n,k) ))); # G. C. Greubel, Nov 13 2019
  • Magma
    function T(n,k)
      if k eq 0 then return n;
      elif k eq n then return n^2;
      else return 2*T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k);
      end if;
      return T;
    end function;
    [T(n,k): k in [0..n], n in [0..12]]; // G. C. Greubel, Nov 13 2019
    
  • Maple
    T := proc(n, k) option remember;
    if k = 0 then RETURN(n) fi;
    if k = n then RETURN(n^2) fi;
    2*T(n-1, k-1) + T(n-1, k) end:
    seq(seq(T(n,k),k=0..n),n=0..9);  # Peter Luschny, Aug 26 2013
  • Mathematica
    T[n_, 0]:= n; T[n_, n_]:= n^2; T[n_, k_]:= T[n, k] = 2*T[n-1, k-1]+T[n-1, k]; Table[T[n, k], {n, 0, 10}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Feb 25 2014 *)
  • PARI
    T(n,k) = if(k==0, n, if(k==n, n^2, 2*T(n-1, k-1) + T(n-1, k) )); \\ G. C. Greubel, Nov 13 2019
    
  • Sage
    @CachedFunction
    def T(n, k):
        if (k==0): return n
        elif (k==n): return n^2
        else: return 2*T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1, k)
    [[T(n, k) for k in (0..n)] for n in (0..12)] # G. C. Greubel, Nov 13 2019
    

Formula

T(n, k) = 2*T(n-1, k-1) + T(n-1, k) for n,k >=0, with T(n,0) = n, T(n,n) = n^2.
Closed-form formula for generalized Pascal's triangle. Let a,b be any numbers. The rule is T(n, k) = a*T(n-1, k-1) + b*T(n-1, k) for n,k >0. Let L(m) and R(m) be the left border and the right border generalized Pascal's triangle, respectively.
As table read by antidiagonals T(n,k) = Sum_{m1=1..n} a^(n-m1) * b^k*R(m1)*C(n+k-m1-1,n-m1) + Sum_{m2=1..k} a^n*b^(k-m2)*L(m2)*C(n+k-m2-1,k-m2); n,k >=0.
As linear sequence a(n) = Sum_{m1=1..i} a^(i-m1)*b^j*R(m1)*C(i+j-m1-1,i-m1) + Sum_{m2=1..j} a^i*b^(j-m2)*L(m2)*C(i+j-m2-1,j-m2), where i=n-t*(t+1)/2-1, j=(t*t+3*t+4)/2-n-1, t=floor((-1+sqrt(8*n-7))/2); n>0.
Some special cases. If a=b=1, then the closed-form formula for arbitrary left and right borders of Pascal like triangle see A228196.
If a=0, then as table read by antidiagonals T(n,k)=b*R(n), as linear sequence a(n)=b*R(i), where i=n-t*(t+1)/2-1, t=floor((-1+sqrt(8*n-7))/2); n>0. The sequence a(n) is the reluctant sequence of sequence b*R(n) - a(n) is triangle array read by rows: row number k coincides with first k elements of the sequence b*R(n). Similarly for b=0, we get T(n,k)=a*L(k).
For this sequence L(m)=m and R(m)=m^2, a=2, b=1. As table read by antidiagonals T(n,k) = Sum_{m1=1..n} 2^(n-m1)*m1^2*C(n+k-m1-1,n-m1) + Sum_{m2=1..k} 2^n*m2*C(n+k-m2-1,k-m2); n,k >=0.
As linear sequence a(n) = Sum_{m1=1..i} 2^(i-m1)*m1^2*C(i+j-m1-1, i-m1) + Sum_{m2=1..j} 2^i*m2*C(i+j-m2-1,j-m2), where i=n-t*(t+1)/2-1, j=(t*t+3*t+4)/2-n-1, t=floor((-1+sqrt(8*n-7))/2); n>0.

A115068 Triangle read by rows: T(n,k) = number of elements in the Coxeter group D_n with descent set contained in {s_k}, for 0<=k<=n-1.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 2, 4, 6, 3, 8, 16, 12, 4, 16, 40, 40, 20, 5, 32, 96, 120, 80, 30, 6, 64, 224, 336, 280, 140, 42, 7, 128, 512, 896, 896, 560, 224, 56, 8, 256, 1152, 2304, 2688, 2016, 1008, 336, 72, 9, 512, 2560, 5760, 7680, 6720, 4032, 1680, 480, 90, 10, 1024, 5632, 14080, 21120
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Elizabeth Morris (epmorris(AT)math.washington.edu), Mar 01 2006

Keywords

Comments

A115068 is the fission of the polynomial sequence (p(x,n)) by the polynomial sequence ((2x+1)^n), where p(n,x)=x^n+x^(n-1)+...+x+1, n>=0. See A193842 for the definition of fission. - Clark Kimberling, Aug 07 2011

Examples

			First six rows:
1
2...2
4...6....3
8...16...12...4
16..40...40...20...5
32..96...120..80...30...6
		

References

  • A. Bjorner and F. Brenti, Combinatorics of Coxeter Groups, Springer, New York, 2005.
  • J. E. Humphreys, Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Haskell
    a115068 n k = a115068_tabl !! (n-1) !! (k-1)
    a115068_row n = a115068_tabl !! (n-1)
    a115068_tabl = iterate (\row -> zipWith (+) (row ++ [1]) $
                                    zipWith (+) (row ++ [0]) ([0] ++ row)) [1]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 22 2013
  • Mathematica
    z = 11;
    p[0, x_] := 1; p[n_, x_] := x*p[n - 1, x] + 1;
    q[n_, x_] := (2 x + 1)^n;
    p1[n_, k_] := Coefficient[p[n, x], x^k];
    p1[n_, 0] := p[n, x] /. x -> 0;
    d[n_, x_] := Sum[p1[n, k]*q[n - 1 - k, x], {k, 0, n - 1}]
    h[n_] := CoefficientList[d[n, x], {x}]
    TableForm[Table[Reverse[h[n]], {n, 0, z}]]
    Flatten[Table[Reverse[h[n]], {n, -1, z}]]  (* A115068 *)
    TableForm[Table[h[n], {n, 0, z}]]
    Flatten[Table[h[n], {n, -1, z}]]   (* A193862 *)

Formula

T(n,k)=binomial(n,k)*2^(n-k-1).
T(n,1) = 2^(n-1), T(n,n) = n, for n > 1: T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + 2*T(n-1,k), 1 < k < n. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 22 2013
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