A141839 a(n) = first term that can be reduced in n steps via repeated interpretation of a(n) as a base b+1 number where b is the largest digit of a(n), such that b is always 5 so that each interpretation is base 6. Terms already fully reduced (i.e., single digits) are excluded.
15, 55, 325, 32501, 410245, 145055113, 305344340421
Offset: 1
Examples
a(3) = 325 because 325 is the first number that can produce a sequence of three terms by repeated interpretation as a base 6 number: [325] (base-6) --> [125] (base-6) --> [53] (base-6) --> [33]. Since 33 cannot be interpreted as a base 6 number, the sequence terminates with 53. a(1) = 15 because 15 is the first number that can be reduced once, yielding no further terms minimally interpretable as base 6.
Extensions
a(7) from Giovanni Resta, Feb 23 2013
Comments