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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A000045 Fibonacci numbers: F(n) = F(n-1) + F(n-2) with F(0) = 0 and F(1) = 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987, 1597, 2584, 4181, 6765, 10946, 17711, 28657, 46368, 75025, 121393, 196418, 317811, 514229, 832040, 1346269, 2178309, 3524578, 5702887, 9227465, 14930352, 24157817, 39088169, 63245986, 102334155
Offset: 0

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D. E. Knuth writes: "Before Fibonacci wrote his work, the sequence F_{n} had already been discussed by Indian scholars, who had long been interested in rhythmic patterns that are formed from one-beat and two-beat notes. The number of such rhythms having n beats altogether is F_{n+1}; therefore both Gopāla (before 1135) and Hemachandra (c. 1150) mentioned the numbers 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, ... explicitly." (TAOCP Vol. 1, 2nd ed.) - Peter Luschny, Jan 11 2015
In keeping with historical accounts (see the references by P. Singh and S. Kak), the generalized Fibonacci sequence a, b, a + b, a + 2b, 2a + 3b, 3a + 5b, ... can also be described as the Gopala-Hemachandra numbers H(n) = H(n-1) + H(n-2), with F(n) = H(n) for a = b = 1, and Lucas sequence L(n) = H(n) for a = 2, b = 1. - Lekraj Beedassy, Jan 11 2015
Susantha Goonatilake writes: "[T]his sequence was well known in South Asia and used in the metrical sciences. Its development is attributed in part to Pingala (200 BC), later being associated with Virahanka (circa 700 AD), Gopala (circa 1135), and Hemachandra (circa 1150)—all of whom lived and worked prior to Fibonacci." (Toward a Global Science: Mining Civilizational Knowledge, p. 126) - Russ Cox, Sep 08 2021
Also sometimes called Hemachandra numbers.
Also sometimes called Lamé's sequence.
For a photograph of "Fibonacci"'s 1202 book, see the Leonardo of Pisa link below.
F(n+2) = number of binary sequences of length n that have no consecutive 0's.
F(n+2) = number of subsets of {1,2,...,n} that contain no consecutive integers.
F(n+1) = number of tilings of a 2 X n rectangle by 2 X 1 dominoes.
F(n+1) = number of matchings (i.e., Hosoya index) in a path graph on n vertices: F(5)=5 because the matchings of the path graph on the vertices A, B, C, D are the empty set, {AB}, {BC}, {CD} and {AB, CD}. - Emeric Deutsch, Jun 18 2001
F(n) = number of compositions of n+1 with no part equal to 1. [Cayley, Grimaldi]
Positive terms are the solutions to z = 2*x*y^4 + (x^2)*y^3 - 2*(x^3)*y^2 - y^5 - (x^4)*y + 2*y for x,y >= 0 (Ribenboim, page 193). When x=F(n), y=F(n + 1) and z > 0 then z=F(n + 1).
For Fibonacci search see Knuth, Vol. 3; Horowitz and Sahni; etc.
F(n) is the diagonal sum of the entries in Pascal's triangle at 45 degrees slope. - Amarnath Murthy, Dec 29 2001 (i.e., row sums of A030528, R. J. Mathar, Oct 28 2021)
F(n+1) is the number of perfect matchings in ladder graph L_n = P_2 X P_n. - Sharon Sela (sharonsela(AT)hotmail.com), May 19 2002
F(n+1) = number of (3412,132)-, (3412,213)- and (3412,321)-avoiding involutions in S_n.
This is also the Horadam sequence (0,1,1,1). - Ross La Haye, Aug 18 2003
An INVERT transform of A019590. INVERT([1,1,2,3,5,8,...]) gives A000129. INVERT([1,2,3,5,8,13,21,...]) gives A028859. - Antti Karttunen, Dec 12 2003
Number of meaningful differential operations of the k-th order on the space R^3. - Branko Malesevic, Mar 02 2004
F(n) = number of compositions of n-1 with no part greater than 2. Example: F(4) = 3 because we have 3 = 1+1+1 = 1+2 = 2+1.
F(n) = number of compositions of n into odd parts; e.g., F(6) counts 1+1+1+1+1+1, 1+1+1+3, 1+1+3+1, 1+3+1+1, 1+5, 3+1+1+1, 3+3, 5+1. - Clark Kimberling, Jun 22 2004
F(n) = number of binary words of length n beginning with 0 and having all runlengths odd; e.g., F(6) counts 010101, 010111, 010001, 011101, 011111, 000101, 000111, 000001. - Clark Kimberling, Jun 22 2004
The number of sequences (s(0),s(1),...,s(n)) such that 0 < s(i) < 5, |s(i)-s(i-1)|=1 and s(0)=1 is F(n+1); e.g., F(5+1) = 8 corresponds to 121212, 121232, 121234, 123212, 123232, 123234, 123432, 123434. - Clark Kimberling, Jun 22 2004 [corrected by Neven Juric, Jan 09 2009]
Likewise F(6+1) = 13 corresponds to these thirteen sequences with seven numbers: 1212121, 1212123, 1212321, 1212323, 1212343, 1232121, 1232123, 1232321, 1232323, 1232343, 1234321, 1234323, 1234343. - Neven Juric, Jan 09 2008
A relationship between F(n) and the Mandelbrot set is discussed in the link "Le nombre d'or dans l'ensemble de Mandelbrot" (in French). - Gerald McGarvey, Sep 19 2004
For n > 0, the continued fraction for F(2n-1)*phi = [F(2n); L(2n-1), L(2n-1), L(2n-1), ...] and the continued fraction for F(2n)*phi = [F(2n+1)-1; 1, L(2n)-2, 1, L(2n)-2, ...]. Also true: F(2n)*phi = [F(2n+1); -L(2n), L(2n), -L(2n), L(2n), ...] where L(i) is the i-th Lucas number (A000204). - Clark Kimberling, Nov 28 2004 [corrected by Hieronymus Fischer, Oct 20 2010]
For any nonzero number k, the continued fraction [4,4,...,4,k], which is n 4's and a single k, equals (F(3n) + k*F(3n+3))/(F(3n-3) + k*F(3n)). - Greg Dresden, Aug 07 2019
F(n+1) (for n >= 1) = number of permutations p of 1,2,3,...,n such that |k-p(k)| <= 1 for k=1,2,...,n. (For <= 2 and <= 3, see A002524 and A002526.) - Clark Kimberling, Nov 28 2004
The ratios F(n+1)/F(n) for n > 0 are the convergents to the simple continued fraction expansion of the golden section. - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 19 2004
Lengths of successive words (starting with a) under the substitution: {a -> ab, b -> a}. - Jeroen F.J. Laros, Jan 22 2005
The Fibonacci sequence, like any additive sequence, naturally tends to be geometric with common ratio not a rational power of 10; consequently, for a sufficiently large number of terms, Benford's law of first significant digit (i.e., first digit 1 <= d <= 9 occurring with probability log_10(d+1) - log_10(d)) holds. - Lekraj Beedassy, Apr 29 2005 (See Brown-Duncan, 1970. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 12 2017)
F(n+2) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(floor((n+k)/2),k), row sums of A046854. - Paul Barry, Mar 11 2003
Number of order ideals of the "zig-zag" poset. See vol. 1, ch. 3, prob. 23 of Stanley. - Mitch Harris, Dec 27 2005
F(n+1)/F(n) is also the Farey fraction sequence (see A097545 for explanation) for the golden ratio, which is the only number whose Farey fractions and continued fractions are the same. - Joshua Zucker, May 08 2006
a(n+2) is the number of paths through 2 plates of glass with n reflections (reflections occurring at plate/plate or plate/air interfaces). Cf. A006356-A006359. - Mitch Harris, Jul 06 2006
F(n+1) equals the number of downsets (i.e., decreasing subsets) of an n-element fence, i.e., an ordered set of height 1 on {1,2,...,n} with 1 > 2 < 3 > 4 < ... n and no other comparabilities. Alternatively, F(n+1) equals the number of subsets A of {1,2,...,n} with the property that, if an odd k is in A, then the adjacent elements of {1,2,...,n} belong to A, i.e., both k - 1 and k + 1 are in A (provided they are in {1,2,...,n}). - Brian Davey, Aug 25 2006
Number of Kekulé structures in polyphenanthrenes. See the paper by Lukovits and Janezic for details. - Parthasarathy Nambi, Aug 22 2006
Inverse: With phi = (sqrt(5) + 1)/2, round(log_phi(sqrt((sqrt(5) a(n) + sqrt(5 a(n)^2 - 4))(sqrt(5) a(n) + sqrt(5 a(n)^2 + 4)))/2)) = n for n >= 3, obtained by rounding the arithmetic mean of the inverses given in A001519 and A001906. - David W. Cantrell (DWCantrell(AT)sigmaxi.net), Feb 19 2007
A result of Jacobi from 1848 states that every symmetric matrix over a p.i.d. is congruent to a triple-diagonal matrix. Consider the maximal number T(n) of summands in the determinant of an n X n triple-diagonal matrix. This is the same as the number of summands in such a determinant in which the main-, sub- and superdiagonal elements are all nonzero. By expanding on the first row we see that the sequence of T(n)'s is the Fibonacci sequence without the initial stammer on the 1's. - Larry Gerstein (gerstein(AT)math.ucsb.edu), Mar 30 2007
Suppose psi=log(phi). We get the representation F(n)=(2/sqrt(5))*sinh(n*psi) if n is even; F(n)=(2/sqrt(5))*cosh(n*psi) if n is odd. There is a similar representation for Lucas numbers (A000032). Many Fibonacci formulas now easily follow from appropriate sinh and cosh formulas. For example: the de Moivre theorem (cosh(x)+sinh(x))^m = cosh(mx)+sinh(mx) produces L(n)^2 + 5F(n)^2 = 2L(2n) and L(n)F(n) = F(2n) (setting x=n*psi and m=2). - Hieronymus Fischer, Apr 18 2007
Inverse: floor(log_phi(sqrt(5)*F(n)) + 1/2) = n, for n > 1. Also for n > 0, floor((1/2)*log_phi(5*F(n)*F(n+1))) = n. Extension valid for integer n, except n=0,-1: floor((1/2)*sign(F(n)*F(n+1))*log_phi|5*F(n)*F(n+1)|) = n (where sign(x) = sign of x). - Hieronymus Fischer, May 02 2007
F(n+2) = the number of Khalimsky-continuous functions with a two-point codomain. - Shiva Samieinia (shiva(AT)math.su.se), Oct 04 2007
This is a_1(n) in the Doroslovacki reference.
Let phi = A001622 then phi^n = (1/phi)*a(n) + a(n+1). - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 15 2007
The sequence of first differences, F(n+1)-F(n), is essentially the same sequence: 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, ... - Colm Mulcahy, Mar 03 2008
Equals row sums of triangle A144152. - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 12 2008
Except for the initial term, the numerator of the convergents to the recursion x = 1/(x+1). - Cino Hilliard, Sep 15 2008
F(n) is the number of possible binary sequences of length n that obey the sequential construction rule: if last symbol is 0, add the complement (1); else add 0 or 1. Here 0,1 are metasymbols for any 2-valued symbol set. This rule has obvious similarities to JFJ Laros's rule, but is based on addition rather than substitution and creates a tree rather than a single sequence. - Ross Drewe, Oct 05 2008
F(n) = Product_{k=1..(n-1)/2} (1 + 4*cos^2 k*Pi/n), where terms = roots to the Fibonacci product polynomials, A152063. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 22 2008
Fp == 5^((p-1)/2) mod p, p = prime [Schroeder, p. 90]. - Gary W. Adamson & Alexander R. Povolotsky, Feb 21 2009
A000032(n)^2 - 5*F(n)^2 = 4*(-1)^n. - Gary W. Adamson, Mar 11 2009
Output of Kasteleyn's formula for the number of perfect matchings of an m X n grid specializes to the Fibonacci sequence for m=2. - Sarah-Marie Belcastro, Jul 04 2009
(F(n),F(n+4)) satisfies the Diophantine equation: X^2 + Y^2 - 7XY = 9*(-1)^n. - Mohamed Bouhamida, Sep 06 2009
(F(n),F(n+2)) satisfies the Diophantine equation: X^2 + Y^2 - 3XY = (-1)^n. - Mohamed Bouhamida, Sep 08 2009
a(n+2) = A083662(A131577(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 26 2009
Difference between number of closed walks of length n+1 from a node on a pentagon and number of walks of length n+1 between two adjacent nodes on a pentagon. - Henry Bottomley, Feb 10 2010
F(n+1) = number of Motzkin paths of length n having exactly one weak ascent. A Motzkin path of length n is a lattice path from (0,0) to (n,0) consisting of U=(1,1), D=(1,-1) and H=(1,0) steps and never going below the x-axis. A weak ascent in a Motzkin path is a maximal sequence of consecutive U and H steps. Example: a(5)=5 because we have (HHHH), (HHU)D, (HUH)D, (UHH)D, and (UU)DD (the unique weak ascent is shown between parentheses; see A114690). - Emeric Deutsch, Mar 11 2010
(F(n-1) + F(n+1))^2 - 5*F(n-2)*F(n+2) = 9*(-1)^n. - Mohamed Bouhamida, Mar 31 2010
From the Pinter and Ziegler reference's abstract: authors "show that essentially the Fibonacci sequence is the unique binary recurrence which contains infinitely many three-term arithmetic progressions. A criterion for general linear recurrences having infinitely many three-term arithmetic progressions is also given." - Jonathan Vos Post, May 22 2010
F(n+1) = number of paths of length n starting at initial node on the path graph P_4. - Johannes W. Meijer, May 27 2010
F(k) = number of cyclotomic polynomials in denominator of generating function for number of ways to place k nonattacking queens on an n X n board. - Vaclav Kotesovec, Jun 07 2010
As n->oo, (a(n)/a(n-1) - a(n-1)/a(n)) tends to 1.0. Example: a(12)/a(11) - a(11)/a(12) = 144/89 - 89/144 = 0.99992197.... - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 16 2010
From Hieronymus Fischer, Oct 20 2010: (Start)
Fibonacci numbers are those numbers m such that m*phi is closer to an integer than k*phi for all k, 1 <= k < m. More formally: a(0)=0, a(1)=1, a(2)=1, a(n+1) = minimal m > a(n) such that m*phi is closer to an integer than a(n)*phi.
For all numbers 1 <= k < F(n), the inequality |k*phi-round(k*phi)| > |F(n)*phi-round(F(n)*phi)| holds.
F(n)*phi - round(F(n)*phi) = -((-phi)^(-n)), for n > 1.
Fract(1/2 + F(n)*phi) = 1/2 -(-phi)^(-n), for n > 1.
Fract(F(n)*phi) = (1/2)*(1 + (-1)^n) - (-phi)^(-n), n > 1.
Inverse: n = -log_phi |1/2 - fract(1/2 + F(n)*phi)|.
(End)
F(A001177(n)*k) mod n = 0, for any integer k. - Gary Detlefs, Nov 27 2010
F(n+k)^2 - F(n)^2 = F(k)*F(2n+k), for even k. - Gary Detlefs, Dec 04 2010
F(n+k)^2 + F(n)^2 = F(k)*F(2n+k), for odd k. - Gary Detlefs, Dec 04 2010
F(n) = round(phi*F(n-1)) for n > 1. - Joseph P. Shoulak, Jan 13 2012
For n > 0: a(n) = length of n-th row in Wythoff array A003603. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 26 2012
From Bridget Tenner, Feb 22 2012: (Start)
The number of free permutations of [n].
The number of permutations of [n] for which s_k in supp(w) implies s_{k+-1} not in supp(w).
The number of permutations of [n] in which every decomposition into length(w) reflections is actually composed of simple reflections. (End)
The sequence F(n+1)^(1/n) is increasing. The sequence F(n+2)^(1/n) is decreasing. - Thomas Ordowski, Apr 19 2012
Two conjectures: For n > 1, F(n+2)^2 mod F(n+1)^2 = F(n)*F(n+1) - (-1)^n. For n > 0, (F(2n) + F(2n+2))^2 = F(4n+3) + Sum_{k = 2..2n} F(2k). - Alex Ratushnyak, May 06 2012
From Ravi Kumar Davala, Jan 30 2014: (Start)
Proof of Ratushnyak's first conjecture: For n > 1, F(n+2)^2 - F(n)*F(n+1) + (-1)^n = 2*F(n+1)^2.
Consider: F(n+2)^2 - F(n)*F(n+1) - 2*F(n+1)^2
= F(n+2)^2 - F(n+1)^2 - F(n+1)^2 - F(n)*F(n+1)
= (F(n+2) + F(n+1))*(F(n+2) - F(n+1)) - F(n+1)*(F(n+1) + F(n))
= F(n+3)*F(n) - F(n+1)*F(n+2) = -(-1)^n.
Proof of second conjecture: L(n) stands for Lucas number sequence from A000032.
Consider the fact that
L(2n+1)^2 = L(4n+2) - 2
(F(2n) + F(2n+2))^2 = F(4n+1) + F(4n+3) - 2
(F(2n) + F(2n+2))^2 = (Sum_{k = 2..2n} F(2k)) + F(4n+3).
(End)
The relationship: INVERT transform of (1,1,0,0,0,...) = (1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ...), while the INVERT transform of (1,0,1,0,1,0,1,...) = (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ...) is equivalent to: The numbers of compositions using parts 1 and 2 is equivalent to the numbers of compositions using parts == 1 (mod 2) (i.e., the odd integers). Generally, the numbers of compositions using parts 1 and k is equivalent to the numbers of compositions of (n+1) using parts 1 mod k. Cf. A000930 for k = 3 and A003269 for k = 4. Example: for k = 2, n = 4 we have the compositions (22; 211, 121; 112; 1111) = 5; but using parts 1 and 3 we have for n = 5: (311, 131, 113, 11111, 5) = 5. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 05 2012
The sequence F(n) is the binomial transformation of the alternating sequence (-1)^(n-1)*F(n), whereas the sequence F(n+1) is the binomial transformation of the alternating sequence (-1)^n*F(n-1). Both of these facts follow easily from the equalities a(n;1)=F(n+1) and b(n;1)=F(n) where a(n;d) and b(n;d) are so-called "delta-Fibonacci" numbers as defined in comments to A014445 (see also the papers of Witula et al.). - Roman Witula, Jul 24 2012
F(n) is the number of different (n-1)-digit binary numbers such that all substrings of length > 1 have at least one digit equal to 1. Example: for n = 5 there are 8 binary numbers with n - 1 = 4 digits (1000, 1001, 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101, 1110, 1111), only the F(n) = 5 numbers 1010, 1011, 1101, 1110 and 1111 have the desired property. - Hieronymus Fischer, Nov 30 2012
For positive n, F(n+1) equals the determinant of the n X n tridiagonal matrix with 1's along the main diagonal, i's along the superdiagonal and along the subdiagonal where i = sqrt(-1). Example: Det([1,i,0,0; i,1,i,0; 0,i,1,i; 0,0,i,1]) = F(4+1) = 5. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 24 2013
For n >= 1, number of compositions of n where there is a drop between every second pair of parts, starting with the first and second part; see example. Also, a(n+1) is the number of compositions where there is a drop between every second pair of parts, starting with the second and third part; see example. - Joerg Arndt, May 21 2013 [see the Hopkins/Tangboonduangjit reference for a proof, see also the Checa reference for alternative proofs and statistics]
Central terms of triangles in A162741 and A208245, n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 28 2013
For n >= 4, F(n-1) is the number of simple permutations in the geometric grid class given in A226433. - Jay Pantone, Sep 08 2013
a(n) are the pentagon (not pentagonal) numbers because the algebraic degree 2 number rho(5) = 2*cos(Pi/5) = phi (golden section), the length ratio diagonal/side in a pentagon, has minimal polynomial C(5,x) = x^2 - x - 1 (see A187360, n=5), hence rho(5)^n = a(n-1)*1 + a(n)*rho(5), n >= 0, in the power basis of the algebraic number field Q(rho(5)). One needs a(-1) = 1 here. See also the P. Steinbach reference under A049310. - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 01 2013
A010056(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 10 2013
Define F(-n) to be F(n) for n odd and -F(n) for n even. Then for all n and k, F(n+2k)^2 - F(n)^2 = F(n+k)*( F(n+3k) - F(n-k) ). - Charlie Marion, Dec 20 2013
( F(n), F(n+2k) ) satisfies the Diophantine equation: X^2 + Y^2 - L(2k)*X*Y = F(4k)^2*(-1)^n. This generalizes Bouhamida's comments dated Sep 06 2009 and Sep 08 2009. - Charlie Marion, Jan 07 2014
For any prime p there is an infinite periodic subsequence within F(n) divisible by p, that begins at index n = 0 with value 0, and its first nonzero term at n = A001602(i), and period k = A001602(i). Also see A236479. - Richard R. Forberg, Jan 26 2014
Range of row n of the circular Pascal array of order 5. - Shaun V. Ault, May 30 2014 [orig. Kicey-Klimko 2011, and observations by Glen Whitehead; more general work found in Ault-Kicey 2014]
Nonnegative range of the quintic polynomial 2*y - y^5 + 2*x*y^4 + x^2*y^3 - 2*x^3*y^2 - x^4*y with x, y >= 0, see Jones 1975. - Charles R Greathouse IV, Jun 01 2014
The expression round(1/(F(k+1)/F(n) + F(k)/F(n+1))), for n > 0, yields a Fibonacci sequence with k-1 leading zeros (with rounding 0.5 to 0). - Richard R. Forberg, Aug 04 2014
Conjecture: For n > 0, F(n) is the number of all admissible residue classes for which specific finite subsequences of the Collatz 3n + 1 function consists of n+2 terms. This has been verified for 0 < n < 51. For details see Links. - Mike Winkler, Oct 03 2014
a(4)=3 and a(6)=8 are the only Fibonacci numbers that are of the form prime+1. - Emmanuel Vantieghem, Oct 02 2014
a(1)=1=a(2), a(3)=2 are the only Fibonacci numbers that are of the form prime-1. - Emmanuel Vantieghem, Jun 07 2015
Any consecutive pair (m, k) of the Fibonacci sequence a(n) illustrates a fair equivalence between m miles and k kilometers. For instance, 8 miles ~ 13 km; 13 miles ~ 21 km. - Lekraj Beedassy, Oct 06 2014
a(n+1) counts closed walks on K_2, containing one loop on the other vertex. Equivalently the (1,1)entry of A^(n+1) where the adjacency matrix of digraph is A=(0,1; 1,1). - _David Neil McGrath, Oct 29 2014
a(n-1) counts closed walks on the graph G(1-vertex;l-loop,2-loop). - David Neil McGrath, Nov 26 2014
From Tom Copeland, Nov 02 2014: (Start)
Let P(x) = x/(1+x) with comp. inverse Pinv(x) = x/(1-x) = -P[-x], and C(x) = [1-sqrt(1-4x)]/2, an o.g.f. for the shifted Catalan numbers A000108, with inverse Cinv(x) = x * (1-x).
Fin(x) = P[C(x)] = C(x)/[1 + C(x)] is an o.g.f. for the Fine numbers, A000957 with inverse Fin^(-1)(x) = Cinv[Pinv(x)] = Cinv[-P(-x)].
Mot(x) = C[P(x)] = C[-Pinv(-x)] gives an o.g.f. for shifted A005043, the Motzkin or Riordan numbers with comp. inverse Mot^(-1)(x) = Pinv[Cinv(x)] = (x - x^2) / (1 - x + x^2) (cf. A057078).
BTC(x) = C[Pinv(x)] gives A007317, a binomial transform of the Catalan numbers, with BTC^(-1)(x) = P[Cinv(x)].
Fib(x) = -Fin[Cinv(Cinv(-x))] = -P[Cinv(-x)] = x + 2 x^2 + 3 x^3 + 5 x^4 + ... = (x+x^2)/[1-x-x^2] is an o.g.f. for the shifted Fibonacci sequence A000045, so the comp. inverse is Fib^(-1)(x) = -C[Pinv(-x)] = -BTC(-x) and Fib(x) = -BTC^(-1)(-x).
Generalizing to P(x,t) = x /(1 + t*x) and Pinv(x,t) = x /(1 - t*x) = -P(-x,t) gives other relations to lattice paths, such as the o.g.f. for A091867, C[P[x,1-t]], and that for A104597, Pinv[Cinv(x),t+1].
(End)
F(n+1) equals the number of binary words of length n avoiding runs of zeros of odd lengths. - Milan Janjic, Jan 28 2015
From Russell Jay Hendel, Apr 12 2015: (Start)
We prove Conjecture 1 of Rashid listed in the Formula section.
We use the following notation: F(n)=A000045(n), the Fibonacci numbers, and L(n) = A000032(n), the Lucas numbers. The fundamental Fibonacci-Lucas recursion asserts that G(n) = G(n-1) + G(n-2), with "L" or "F" replacing "G".
We need the following prerequisites which we label (A), (B), (C), (D). The prerequisites are formulas in the Koshy book listed in the References section. (A) F(m-1) + F(m+1) = L(m) (Koshy, p. 97, #32), (B) L(2m) + 2*(-1)^m = L(m)^2 (Koshy p. 97, #41), (C) F(m+k)*F(m-k) = (-1)^n*F(k)^2 (Koshy, p. 113, #24, Tagiuri's identity), and (D) F(n)^2 + F(n+1)^2 = F(2n+1) (Koshy, p. 97, #30).
We must also prove (E), L(n+2)*F(n-1) = F(2n+1)+2*(-1)^n. To prove (E), first note that by (A), proof of (E) is equivalent to proving that F(n+1)*F(n-1) + F(n+3)*F(n-1) = F(2n+1) + 2*(-1)^n. But by (C) with k=1, we have F(n+1)*F(n-1) = F(n)^2 + (-1)^n. Applying (C) again with k=2 and m=n+1, we have F(n+3)*F(n-1) = F(n+1) + (-1)^n. Adding these two applications of (C) together and using (D) we have F(n+1)*F(n-1) + F(n+3)*F(n-1) = F(n)^2 + F(n+1)^2 + 2*(-1)^n = F(2n+1) + 2(-1)^n, completing the proof of (E).
We now prove Conjecture 1. By (A) and the Fibonacci-Lucas recursion, we have F(2n+1) + F(2n+2) + F(2n+3) + F(2n+4) = (F(2n+1) + F(2n+3)) + (F(2n+2) + F(2n+4)) = L(2n+2) +L(2n+3) = L(2n+4). But then by (B), with m=2n+4, we have sqrt(L(2n+4) + 2(-1)^n) = L(n+2). Finally by (E), we have L(n+2)*F(n-1) = F(2n+1) + 2*(-1)^n. Dividing both sides by F(n-1), we have (F(2n+1) + 2*(-1)^n)/F(n-1) = L(n+2) = sqrt(F(2n+1) + F(2n+2) + F(2n+3) + F(2n+4) + 2(-1)^n), as required.
(End)
In Fibonacci's Liber Abaci the rabbit problem appears in the translation of L. E. Sigler on pp. 404-405, and a remark [27] on p. 637. - Wolfdieter Lang, Apr 17 2015
a(n) counts partially ordered partitions of (n-1) into parts 1,2,3 where only the order of adjacent 1's and 2's are unimportant. (See example.) - David Neil McGrath, Jul 27 2015
F(n) divides F(n*k). Proved by Marjorie Bicknell and Verner E Hoggatt Jr. - Juhani Heino, Aug 24 2015
F(n) is the number of UDU-equivalence classes of ballot paths of length n. Two ballot paths of length n with steps U = (1,1), D = (1,-1) are UDU-equivalent whenever the positions of UDU are the same in both paths. - Kostas Manes, Aug 25 2015
Cassini's identity F(2n+1) * F(2n+3) = F(2n+2)^2 + 1 is the basis for a geometrical paradox (or dissection fallacy) in A262342. - Jonathan Sondow, Oct 23 2015
For n >= 4, F(n) is the number of up-down words on alphabet {1,2,3} of length n-2. - Ran Pan, Nov 23 2015
F(n+2) is the number of terms in p(n), where p(n)/q(n) is the n-th convergent of the formal infinite continued fraction [a(0),a(1),...]; e.g., p(3) = a(0)a(1)a(2)a(3) + a(0)a(1) + a(0)a(3) + a(2)a(3) + 1 has F(5) terms. Also, F(n+1) is the number of terms in q(n). - Clark Kimberling, Dec 23 2015
F(n+1) (for n >= 1) is the permanent of an n X n matrix M with M(i,j)=1 if |i-j| <= 1 and 0 otherwise. - Dmitry Efimov, Jan 08 2016
A trapezoid has three sides of lengths in order F(n), F(n+2), F(n). For increasing n a very close approximation to the maximum area will have the fourth side equal to 2*F(n+1). For a trapezoid with lengths of sides in order F(n+2), F(n), F(n+2), the fourth side will be F(n+3). - J. M. Bergot, Mar 17 2016
(1) Join two triangles with lengths of sides L(n), F(n+3), L(n+2) and F(n+2), L(n+1), L(n+2) (where L(n)=A000032(n)) along the common side of length L(n+2) to create an irregular quadrilateral. Its area is approximately 5*F(2*n-1) - (F(2*n-7) - F(2*n-13))/5. (2) Join two triangles with lengths of sides L(n), F(n+2), F(n+3) and L(n+1), F(n+1), F(n+3) along the common side F(n+3) to form an irregular quadrilateral. Its area is approximately 4*F(2*n-1) - 2*(F(2*n-7) + F(2*n-18)). - J. M. Bergot, Apr 06 2016
From Clark Kimberling, Jun 13 2016: (Start)
Let T* be the infinite tree with root 0 generated by these rules: if p is in T*, then p+1 is in T* and x*p is in T*.
Let g(n) be the set of nodes in the n-th generation, so that g(0) = {0}, g(1) = {1}, g(2) = {2, x}, g(3) = {3, 2x, x+1, x^2}, etc.
Let T(r) be the tree obtained by substituting r for x.
If a positive integer N is not a square and r = sqrt(N), then the number of (not necessarily distinct) integers in g(n) is A000045(n), for n >= 1. See A274142. (End)
Consider the partitions of n, with all summands initially listed in nonincreasing order. Freeze all the 1's in place and then allow all the other summands to change their order, without displacing any of the 1's. The resulting number of arrangements is a(n+1). - Gregory L. Simay, Jun 14 2016
Limit of the matrix power M^k shown in A163733, Sep 14 2016, as k->infinity results in a single column vector equal to the Fibonacci sequence. - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 19 2016
F(n) and Lucas numbers L(n), being related by the formulas F(n) = (F(n-1) + L(n-1))/2 and L(n) = 2 F(n+1) - F(n), are a typical pair of "autosequences" (see the link to OEIS Wiki). - Jean-François Alcover, Jun 10 2017
Also the number of independent vertex sets and vertex covers in the (n-2)-path graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 22 2017
Shifted numbers of {UD, DU, FD, DF}-equivalence classes of Łukasiewicz paths. Łukasiewicz paths are P-equivalent iff the positions of pattern P are identical in these paths. - Sergey Kirgizov, Apr 08 2018
For n > 0, F(n) = the number of Markov equivalence classes with skeleton the path on n nodes. See Theorem 2.1 in the article by A. Radhakrishnan et al. below. - Liam Solus, Aug 23 2018
For n >= 2, also: number of terms in A032858 (every other base-3 digit is strictly smaller than its neighbors) with n-2 digits in base 3. - M. F. Hasler, Oct 05 2018
F(n+1) is the number of fixed points of the Foata transformation on S_n. - Kevin Long, Oct 17 2018
F(n+2) is the dimension of the Hecke algebra of type A_n with independent parameters (0,1,0,1,...) or (1,0,1,0,...). See Corollary 1.5 in the link "Hecke algebras with independent parameters". - Jia Huang, Jan 20 2019
The sequence is the second INVERT transform of (1, -1, 2, -3, 5, -8, 13, ...) and is the first sequence in an infinite set of successive INVERT transforms generated from (1, 0, 1, 0, 1, ...). Refer to the array shown in A073133. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 16 2019
From Kai Wang, Dec 16 2019: (Start)
F(n*k)/F(k) = Sum_{i=0..n-1; j=0..n-1; i+2*j=n-1} (-1)^(j*(k-1))*L(k)^i*((i+j)!/(i!*j!)).
F((2*m+1)*k)/F(k) = Sum_{i=0..m-1} (-1)^(i*k)*L((2*m-2*i)*k) + (-1)^(m*k).
F(2*m*k)/F(k) = Sum_{i=0..m-1} (-1)^(i*k)*L((2*m-2*i-1)*k).
F(m+s)*F(n+r) - F(m+r)*F(n+s) = (-1)^(n+s)*F(m-n)*F(r-s).
F(m+r)*F(n+s) + F(m+s)*F(n+r) = (2*L(m+n+r+s) - (-1)^(n+s)*L(m-n)*L(r-s))/5.
L(m+r)*L(n+s) - 5*F(m+s)*F(n+r) = (-1)^(n+s)*L(m-n)*L(r-s).
L(m+r)*L(n+s) + 5*F(m+s)*F(n+r) = 2*L(m+n+r+s) + (-1)^(n+s)*5*F(m-n)*F(r-s).
L(m+r)*L(n+s) - L(m+s)*L(n+r) = (-1)^(n+s)*5*F(m-n)*F(r-s). (End)
F(n+1) is the number of permutations in S_n whose principal order ideals in the weak order are Boolean lattices. - Bridget Tenner, Jan 16 2020
F(n+1) is the number of permutations w in S_n that form Boolean intervals [s, w] in the weak order for every simple reflection s in the support of w. - Bridget Tenner, Jan 16 2020
F(n+1) is the number of subsets of {1,2,.,.,n} in which all differences between successive elements of subsets are odd. For example, for n = 6, F(7) = 13 and the 13 subsets are {6}, {1,6}, {3,6}, {5,6}, {2,3,6}, {2,5,6}, {4,5,6}, {1,2,3,6}, {1,2,5,6}, {1,4,5,6}, {3,4,5,6}, {2,3,4,5,6}, {1,2,3,4,5,6}. For even differences between elements see Comment in A016116. - Enrique Navarrete, Jul 01 2020
F(n) is the number of subsets of {1,2,...,n} in which the smallest element of the subset equals the size of the subset (this type of subset is sometimes called extraordinary). For example, F(6) = 8 and the subsets are {1}, {2,3}, {2,4}, {2,5}, {3,4,5}, {2,6}, {3,4,6}, {3,5,6}. It is easy to see that these subsets follow the Fibonacci recursion F(n) = F(n-1) + F(n-2) since we get F(n) such subsets by keeping all F(n-1) subsets from the previous stage (in the example, the F(5)=5 subsets that don't include 6), and by adding one to all elements and appending an additional element n to each subset in F(n-2) subsets (in the example, by applying this to the F(4)=3 subsets {1}, {2,3}, {2,4} we obtain {2,6}, {3,4,6}, {3,5,6}). - Enrique Navarrete, Sep 28 2020
Named "série de Fibonacci" by Lucas (1877) after the Italian mathematician Fibonacci (Leonardo Bonacci, c. 1170 - c. 1240/50). In 1876 he named the sequence "série de Lamé" after the French mathematician Gabriel Lamé (1795 - 1870). - Amiram Eldar, Apr 16 2021
F(n) is the number of edge coverings of the path with n edges. - M. Farrokhi D. G., Sep 30 2021
LCM(F(m), F(n)) is a Fibonacci number if and only if either F(m) divides F(n) or F(n) divides F(m). - M. Farrokhi D. G., Sep 30 2021
Every nonunit positive rational number has at most one representation as the quotient of two Fibonacci numbers. - M. Farrokhi D. G., Sep 30 2021
The infinite sum F(n)/10^(n-1) for all natural numbers n is equal to 100/89. More generally, the sum of F(n)/(k^(n-1)) for all natural numbers n is equal to k^2/(k^2-k-1). Jonatan Djurachkovitch, Dec 31 2023
For n >= 1, number of compositions (c(1),c(2),...,c(k)) of n where c(1), c(3), c(5), ... are 1. To obtain such compositions K(n) of length n increase all parts c(2) by one in all of K(n-1) and prepend two parts 1 in all of K(n-2). - Joerg Arndt, Jan 05 2024
Cohn (1964) proved that a(12) = 12^2 is the only square in the sequence greater than a(1) = 1. - M. F. Hasler, Dec 18 2024
Product_{i=n-2..n+2} F(i) = F(n)^5 - F(n). For example, (F(4)F(5)F(6)F(7)F(8))=(3 * 5 * 8 * 13 * 21) = 8^5 - 8. - Jules Beauchamp, Apr 28 2025
F(n) is even iff n is a multiple of 3. - Stefano Spezia, Jul 06 2025

Examples

			For x = 0,1,2,3,4, x=1/(x+1) = 1, 1/2, 2/3, 3/5, 5/8. These fractions have numerators 1,1,2,3,5, which are the 2nd to 6th terms of the sequence. - _Cino Hilliard_, Sep 15 2008
From _Joerg Arndt_, May 21 2013: (Start)
There are a(7)=13 compositions of 7 where there is a drop between every second pair of parts, starting with the first and second part:
01:  [ 2 1 2 1 1 ]
02:  [ 2 1 3 1 ]
03:  [ 2 1 4 ]
04:  [ 3 1 2 1 ]
05:  [ 3 1 3 ]
06:  [ 3 2 2 ]
07:  [ 4 1 2 ]
08:  [ 4 2 1 ]
09:  [ 4 3 ]
10:  [ 5 1 1 ]
11:  [ 5 2 ]
12:  [ 6 1 ]
13:  [ 7 ]
There are abs(a(6+1))=13 compositions of 6 where there is no rise between every second pair of parts, starting with the second and third part:
01:  [ 1 2 1 2 ]
02:  [ 1 3 1 1 ]
03:  [ 1 3 2 ]
04:  [ 1 4 1 ]
05:  [ 1 5 ]
06:  [ 2 2 1 1 ]
07:  [ 2 3 1 ]
08:  [ 2 4 ]
09:  [ 3 2 1 ]
10:  [ 3 3 ]
11:  [ 4 2 ]
12:  [ 5 1 ]
13:  [ 6 ]
(End)
Partially ordered partitions of (n-1) into parts 1,2,3 where only the order of the adjacent 1's and 2's are unimportant. E.g., a(8)=21. These are (331),(313),(133),(322),(232),(223),(3211),(2311),(1321),(2131),(1132),(2113),(31111),(13111),(11311),(11131),(11113),(2221),(22111),(211111),(1111111). - _David Neil McGrath_, Jul 25 2015
Consider the partitions of 7 with summands initially listed in nonincreasing order. Keep the 1's frozen in position (indicated by "[]") and then allow the other summands to otherwise vary their order: 7; 6,[1]; 5,2; 2,5; 4,3; 3,4; 5,[1,1], 4,2,[1]; 2,4,[1]; 3,3,[1]; 3,3,2; 3,2,3; 2,3,3; 4,[1,1,1]; 3,2,[1,1]; 2,3,[1,1]; 2,2,2,[1]; 3,[1,1,1,1]; 2,2,[1,1,1]; 2,[1,1,1,1,1]; [1,1,1,1,1,1,1]. There are 21 = a(7+1) arrangements in all. - _Gregory L. Simay_, Jun 14 2016
		

References

  • Mohammad K. Azarian, The Generating Function for the Fibonacci Sequence, Missouri Journal of Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 2, No. 2, Spring 1990, pp. 78-79. Zentralblatt MATH, Zbl 1097.11516.
  • Mohammad K. Azarian, A Generalization of the Climbing Stairs Problem II, Missouri Journal of Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 16, No. 1, Winter 2004, pp. 12-17.
  • P. Bachmann, Niedere Zahlentheorie (1902, 1910), reprinted Chelsea, NY, 1968, vol. 2, p. 70.
  • R. B. Banks, Slicing Pizzas, Racing Turtles and Further Adventures in Applied Mathematics, Princeton Univ. Press, 1999. See p. 84.
  • A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, id. 4.
  • Marjorie Bicknell and Verner E Hoggatt, Fibonacci's Problem Book, Fibonacci Association, San Jose, Calif., 1974.
  • Miklos Bona, editor, Handbook of Enumerative Combinatorics, CRC Press, 2015, pages 24 (Ex. 18), 489, 541.
  • A. Cayley, Theorems in Trigonometry and on Partitions, Messenger of Mathematics, 5 (1876), pp. 164, 188 = Mathematical Papers Vol. 10, n. 634, p. 16.
  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 84, 111-124, 202-203.
  • B. A. Davey and H. A. Priestley, Introduction to Lattices and Order (2nd edition), CUP, 2002. (See Exercise 1.15.)
  • B. Davis, 'The law of first digits' in 'Science Today' (subsequently renamed '2001') March 1980 p. 55, Times of India, Mumbai.
  • S. R. Finch, Mathematical Constants, Cambridge, 2003, Section 1.2.
  • R. P. Grimaldi, Compositions without the summand 1, Proceedings Thirty-second Southeastern International Conference on Combinatorics, Graph Theory and Computing (Baton Rouge, LA, 2001). Congr. Numer. 152 (2001), 33-43.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §8.5 The Fibonacci and Related Sequences, pp. 286-288.
  • H. Halberstam and K. F. Roth, Sequences, Oxford, 1966; see Appendix.
  • S. Happersett, "Mathematical meditations", Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, 1 (2007), 29 - 33.
  • G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers. 3rd ed., Oxford Univ. Press, 1954; see esp. p. 148.
  • V. E. Hoggatt, Jr., Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers. Houghton, Boston, MA, 1969.
  • E. Horowitz and S. Sahni, Fundamentals of Data Structures, Computer Science Press, 1976; p. 338.
  • M. Kauers and P. Paule, The Concrete Tetrahedron, Springer 2011, p. 63.
  • C. Kicey and K. Klimko, Some geometry of Pascal's triangle, Pi Mu Epsilon Journal, 13(4):229-245 (2011).
  • D. E. Knuth, The Art of Computer Programming. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, Vol. 1, p. 78; Vol. 3, Section 6.2.1.
  • Thomas Koshy, "Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers with Applications", John Wiley and Sons, 2001.
  • Leonardo of Pisa [Leonardo Pisano], Liber Abaci [The Book of Calculation], 1202.
  • D. Litchfield, D. Goldenheim and C. H. Dietrich, Euclid, Fibonacci and Sketchpad, Math. Teacher, 90 (1997).
  • Lukovits et al., Nanotubes: Number of Kekulé structures and aromaticity, J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci, (2003), vol. 43, 609-614. See eq. 2 on page 610.
  • I. Lukovits and D. Janezic, "Enumeration of conjugated circuits in nanotubes", J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., vol. 44, 410-414 (2004). See Table 1, second column.
  • B. Malesevic: Some combinatorial aspects of differential operation composition on the space R^n, Univ. Beograd, Publ. Elektrotehn. Fak., Ser. Mat. 9 (1998), 29-33.
  • G. Mantel, Resten van wederkeerige Reeksen, Nieuw Archief v. Wiskunde, 2nd series, I (1894), 172-184.
  • C. N. Menhinick, The Fibonacci Resonance and other new Golden Ratio discoveries, Onperson, (2015), pages 200-206.
  • S. Mneimneh, Fibonacci in The Curriculum: Not Just a Bad Recurrence, in Proceeding SIGCSE '15 Proceedings of the 46th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, Pages 253-258.
  • Hilary I. Okagbue, Muminu O. Adamu, Sheila A. Bishop, Abiodun A. Opanuga, Digit and Iterative Digit Sum of Fibonacci numbers, their identities and powers, International Journal of Applied Engineering Research ISSN 0973-4562 Volume 11, Number 6 (2016) pp 4623-4627.
  • Clifford A. Pickover, A Passion for Mathematics, Wiley, 2005; see p. 49.
  • Clifford A. Pickover, The Math Book, From Pythagoras to the 57th Dimension, 250 Milestones in the History of Mathematics, Sterling Publ., NY, 2009, page 274.
  • Alfred S. Posamentier, Math Charmers, Tantalizing Tidbits for the Mind, Prometheus Books, NY, 2003, pages 55-58, 255-260.
  • Alfred S. Posamentier and I. Lehmann, The Fabulous Fibonacci Numbers, Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY 2007.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The New Book of Prime Number Records, Springer, 1996.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, My Numbers, My Friends: Popular Lectures on Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, NY, 2000, p. 3.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The Little Book of Bigger Primes, Springer-Verlag NY 2004. See pp. 45, 59.
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  • Manfred R. Schroeder, "Number Theory in Science and Communication", 5th ed., Springer-Verlag, 2009
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  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
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  • S. Vajda, Fibonacci and Lucas numbers and the Golden Section, Ellis Horwood Ltd., Chichester, 1989.
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  • N. N. Vorobiev, Fibonacci Numbers, Birkhauser (Basel; Boston) 2002.
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  • R. Witula, D. Slota, delta-Fibonacci Numbers, Appl. Anal. Discrete Math., 3 (2009), 310-329.

Crossrefs

First row of arrays A103323, A172236, A234357. Second row of arrays A099390, A048887, and A092921 (k-generalized Fibonacci numbers).
Cf. also A001175 (Pisano periods), A001177 (Entry points), A001176 (number of zeros in a fundamental period).
Fibonacci-Pascal triangles: A027926, A036355, A037027, A074829, A105809, A109906, A111006, A114197, A162741, A228074.
Fibonacci-Cayley triangle: A327992.
Boustrophedon transforms: A000738, A000744.
Numbers of prime factors: A022307 and A038575.
Cf. A061446 (primitive part of Fibonacci numbers), A000010 (comments on product formulas).
Number of digits of F(n): A020909 (base 2), A020911 (base 3), A020912 (base 4), A020913 (base 5), A060384 (base 10), A261585 (base 60).

Programs

  • Axiom
    [fibonacci(n) for n in 0..50]
    
  • GAP
    Fib:=[0,1];; for n in [3..10^3] do Fib[n]:=Fib[n-1]+Fib[n-2]; od; Fib; # Muniru A Asiru, Sep 03 2017
    
  • Haskell
    -- Based on code from http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/The_Fibonacci_sequence
    -- which also has other versions.
    fib :: Int -> Integer
    fib n = fibs !! n
        where
            fibs = 0 : 1 : zipWith (+) fibs (tail fibs)
    {- Example of use: map fib [0..38] Gerald McGarvey, Sep 29 2009 -}
    
  • Julia
    function fib(n)
       F = BigInt[1 1; 1 0]
       Fn = F^n
       Fn[2, 1]
    end
    println([fib(n) for n in 0:38]) # Peter Luschny, Feb 23 2017
    
  • Julia
    # faster
    function fibrec(n::Int)
        n == 0 && return (BigInt(0), BigInt(1))
        a, b = fibrec(div(n, 2))
        c = a * (b * 2 - a)
        d = a * a + b * b
        iseven(n) ? (c, d) : (d, c + d)
    end
    fibonacci(n::Int) = fibrec(n)[1]
    println([fibonacci(n) for n in 0:40]) # Peter Luschny, Apr 03 2022
    
  • Magma
    [Fibonacci(n): n in [0..38]];
    
  • Maple
    A000045 := proc(n) combinat[fibonacci](n); end;
    ZL:=[S, {a = Atom, b = Atom, S = Prod(X,Sequence(Prod(X,b))), X = Sequence(b,card >= 1)}, unlabelled]: seq(combstruct[count](ZL, size=n), n=0..38); # Zerinvary Lajos, Apr 04 2008
    spec := [B, {B=Sequence(Set(Z, card>1))}, unlabeled ]: seq(combstruct[count](spec, size=n), n=1..39); # Zerinvary Lajos, Apr 04 2008
    # The following Maple command isFib(n) yields true or false depending on whether n is a Fibonacci number or not.
    with(combinat): isFib := proc(n) local a: a := proc(n) local j: for j while fibonacci(j) <= n do fibonacci(j) end do: fibonacci(j-1) end proc: evalb(a(n) = n) end proc: # Emeric Deutsch, Nov 11 2014
  • Mathematica
    Table[Fibonacci[k], {k, 0, 50}] (* Mohammad K. Azarian, Jul 11 2015 *)
    Table[2^n Sqrt @ Product[(Cos[Pi k/(n + 1)]^2 + 1/4), {k, n}] // FullSimplify, {n, 15}]; (* Kasteleyn's formula specialized, Sarah-Marie Belcastro, Jul 04 2009 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{1, 1}, {0, 1}, 40] (* Harvey P. Dale, Aug 03 2014 *)
    Fibonacci[Range[0, 20]] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 22 2017 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[-(x/(-1 + x + x^2)), {x, 0, 20}], x] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 22 2017 *)
  • Maxima
    makelist(fib(n),n,0,100); /* Martin Ettl, Oct 21 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    a(n) = fibonacci(n)
    
  • PARI
    a(n) = imag(quadgen(5)^n)
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=my(phi=quadgen(5));(phi^n-(-1/phi)^n)/(2*phi-1) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Jun 17 2012
    
  • PARI
    is_A000045=A010056 \\ Characteristic function: see there. - M. F. Hasler, Feb 21 2025
    
  • Python
    # From Jaap Spies, Jan 05 2007, updated by Peter Luschny, Feb 21 2023:
    from itertools import islice
    def fib_gen():
        x, y = 0, 1
        while True:
            yield x
            x, y = y, x + y
    fib_list = lambda n: list(islice(fib_gen(), n))
    
  • Python
    is_A000045 = A010056 # See there: Characteristic function. Used e.g. in A377092.
    A000045 = lambda n: (4<M. F. Hasler, improving old code from 2023, Feb 20 2025
    
  • Python
    [(i:=-1)+(j:=1)] + [(j:=i+j)+(i:=j-i) for  in range(100)] # _Jwalin Bhatt, Apr 03 2025
    
  • Sage
    # Demonstration program from Jaap Spies:
    a = sloane.A000045; # choose sequence
    print(a)            # This returns the name of the sequence.
    print(a(38))        # This returns the 38th term of the sequence.
    print(a.list(39))   # This returns a list of the first 39 terms.
    
  • Sage
    a = BinaryRecurrenceSequence(1,1); print([a(n) for n in range(20)])
    # Closed form integer formula with F(1) = 0 from Paul Hankin (see link).
    F = lambda n: (4<<(n-1)*(n+2))//((4<<2*(n-1))-(2<<(n-1))-1)&((2<<(n-1))-1)
    print([F(n) for n in range(20)]) # Peter Luschny, Aug 28 2016
    
  • Sage
    print(list(fibonacci_sequence(0, 40))) # Bruno Berselli, Jun 26 2014
    
  • Scala
    def fibonacci(n: BigInt): BigInt = {
      val zero = BigInt(0)
      def fibTail(n: BigInt, a: BigInt, b: BigInt): BigInt = n match {
        case `zero` => a
        case _ => fibTail(n - 1, b, a + b)
      }
      fibTail(n, 0, 1)
    } // Based on "Case 3: Tail Recursion" from Carrasquel (2016) link
    (0 to 49).map(fibonacci()) // _Alonso del Arte, Apr 13 2019

Formula

G.f.: x / (1 - x - x^2).
G.f.: Sum_{n>=0} x^n * Product_{k=1..n} (k + x)/(1 + k*x). - Paul D. Hanna, Oct 26 2013
F(n) = ((1+sqrt(5))^n - (1-sqrt(5))^n)/(2^n*sqrt(5)).
Alternatively, F(n) = ((1/2+sqrt(5)/2)^n - (1/2-sqrt(5)/2)^n)/sqrt(5).
F(n) = F(n-1) + F(n-2) = -(-1)^n F(-n).
F(n) = round(phi^n/sqrt(5)).
F(n+1) = Sum_{j=0..floor(n/2)} binomial(n-j, j).
A strong divisibility sequence, that is, gcd(a(n), a(m)) = a(gcd(n, m)) for all positive integers n and m. - Michael Somos, Jan 03 2017
E.g.f.: (2/sqrt(5))*exp(x/2)*sinh(sqrt(5)*x/2). - Len Smiley, Nov 30 2001
[0 1; 1 1]^n [0 1] = [F(n); F(n+1)]
x | F(n) ==> x | F(kn).
A sufficient condition for F(m) to be divisible by a prime p is (p - 1) divides m, if p == 1 or 4 (mod 5); (p + 1) divides m, if p == 2 or 3 (mod 5); or 5 divides m, if p = 5. (This is essentially Theorem 180 in Hardy and Wright.) - Fred W. Helenius (fredh(AT)ix.netcom.com), Jun 29 2001
a(n)=F(n) has the property: F(n)*F(m) + F(n+1)*F(m+1) = F(n+m+1). - Miklos Kristof, Nov 13 2003
From Kurmang. Aziz. Rashid, Feb 21 2004: (Start)
Conjecture 1: for n >= 2, sqrt(F(2n+1) + F(2n+2) + F(2n+3) + F(2n+4) + 2*(-1)^n) = (F(2n+1) + 2*(-1)^n)/F(n-1). [For a proof see Comments section.]
Conjecture 2: for n >= 0, (F(n+2)*F(n+3)) - (F(n+1)*F(n+4)) + (-1)^n = 0.
[Two more conjectures removed by Peter Luschny, Nov 17 2017]
Theorem 1: for n >= 0, (F(n+3)^ 2 - F(n+1)^ 2)/F(n+2) = (F(n+3)+ F(n+1)).
Theorem 2: for n >= 0, F(n+10) = 11*F(n+5) + F(n).
Theorem 3: for n >= 6, F(n) = 4*F(n-3) + F(n-6). (End)
Conjecture 2 of Rashid is actually a special case of the general law F(n)*F(m) + F(n+1)*F(m+1) = F(n+m+1) (take n <- n+1 and m <- -(n+4) in this law). - Harmel Nestra (harmel.nestra(AT)ut.ee), Apr 22 2005
Conjecture 2 of Rashid Kurmang simplified: F(n)*F(n+3) = F(n+1)*F(n+2)-(-1)^n. Follows from d'Ocagne's identity: m=n+2. - Alex Ratushnyak, May 06 2012
Conjecture: for all c such that 2-phi <= c < 2*(2-phi) we have F(n) = floor(phi*a(n-1)+c) for n > 2. - Gerald McGarvey, Jul 21 2004
For x > phi, Sum_{n>=0} F(n)/x^n = x/(x^2 - x - 1). - Gerald McGarvey, Oct 27 2004
F(n+1) = exponent of the n-th term in the series f(x, 1) determined by the equation f(x, y) = xy + f(xy, x). - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 19 2004
a(n-1) = Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^k*binomial(n-ceiling(k/2), floor(k/2)). - Benoit Cloitre, May 05 2005
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} abs(A108299(n, k)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jun 01 2005
a(n) = A001222(A000304(n)).
F(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial((n+k)/2, (n-k)/2)(1+(-1)^(n-k))/2. - Paul Barry, Aug 28 2005
Fibonacci(n) = Product_{j=1..ceiling(n/2)-1} (1 + 4(cos(j*Pi/n))^2). [Bicknell and Hoggatt, pp. 47-48.] - Emeric Deutsch, Oct 15 2006
F(n) = 2^-(n-1)*Sum_{k=0..floor((n-1)/2)} binomial(n,2*k+1)*5^k. - Hieronymus Fischer, Feb 07 2006
a(n) = (b(n+1) + b(n-1))/n where {b(n)} is the sequence A001629. - Sergio Falcon, Nov 22 2006
F(n*m) = Sum_{k = 0..m} binomial(m,k)*F(n-1)^k*F(n)^(m-k)*F(m-k). The generating function of F(n*m) (n fixed, m = 0,1,2,...) is G(x) = F(n)*x / ((1 - F(n-1)*x)^2 - F(n)*x*(1 - F(n-1)*x) - (F(n)*x)^2). E.g., F(15) = 610 = F(5*3) = binomial(3,0)* F(4)^0*F(5)^3*F(3) + binomial(3,1)* F(4)^1*F(5)^2*F(2) + binomial(3,2)* F(4)^2*F(5)^1*F(1) + binomial(3,3)* F(4)^3*F(5)^0*F(0) = 1*1*125*2 + 3*3*25*1 + 3*9*5*1 + 1*27*1*0 = 250 + 225 + 135 + 0 = 610. - Miklos Kristof, Feb 12 2007
From Miklos Kristof, Mar 19 2007: (Start)
Let L(n) = A000032(n) = Lucas numbers. Then:
For a >= b and odd b, F(a+b) + F(a-b) = L(a)*F(b).
For a >= b and even b, F(a+b) + F(a-b) = F(a)*L(b).
For a >= b and odd b, F(a+b) - F(a-b) = F(a)*L(b).
For a >= b and even b, F(a+b) - F(a-b) = L(a)*F(b).
F(n+m) + (-1)^m*F(n-m) = F(n)*L(m);
F(n+m) - (-1)^m*F(n-m) = L(n)*F(m);
F(n+m+k) + (-1)^k*F(n+m-k) + (-1)^m*(F(n-m+k) + (-1)^k*F(n-m-k)) = F(n)*L(m)*L(k);
F(n+m+k) - (-1)^k*F(n+m-k) + (-1)^m*(F(n-m+k) - (-1)^k*F(n-m-k)) = L(n)*L(m)*F(k);
F(n+m+k) + (-1)^k*F(n+m-k) - (-1)^m*(F(n-m+k) + (-1)^k*F(n-m-k)) = L(n)*F(m)*L(k);
F(n+m+k) - (-1)^k*F(n+m-k) - (-1)^m*(F(n-m+k) - (-1)^k*F(n-m-k)) = 5*F(n)*F(m)*F(k). (End)
A corollary to Kristof 2007 is 2*F(a+b) = F(a)*L(b) + L(a)*F(b). - Graeme McRae, Apr 24 2014
For n > m, the sum of the 2m consecutive Fibonacci numbers F(n-m-1) thru F(n+m-2) is F(n)*L(m) if m is odd, and L(n)*F(m) if m is even (see the McRae link). - Graeme McRae, Apr 24 2014.
F(n) = b(n) + (p-1)*Sum_{k=2..n-1} floor(b(k)/p)*F(n-k+1) where b(k) is the digital sum analog of the Fibonacci recurrence, defined by b(k) = ds_p(b(k-1)) + ds_p(b(k-2)), b(0)=0, b(1)=1, ds_p=digital sum base p. Example for base p=10: F(n) = A010077(n) + 9*Sum_{k=2..n-1} A059995(A010077(k))*F(n-k+1). - Hieronymus Fischer, Jul 01 2007
F(n) = b(n)+p*Sum_{k=2..n-1} floor(b(k)/p)*F(n-k+1) where b(k) is the digital product analog of the Fonacci recurrence, defined by b(k) = dp_p(b(k-1)) + dp_p(b(k-2)), b(0)=0, b(1)=1, dp_p=digital product base p. Example for base p=10: F(n) = A074867(n) + 10*Sum_{k=2..n-1} A059995(A074867(k))*F(n-k+1). - Hieronymus Fischer, Jul 01 2007
a(n) = denominator of continued fraction [1,1,1,...] (with n ones); e.g., 2/3 = continued fraction [1,1,1]; where barover[1] = [1,1,1,...] = 0.6180339.... - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 29 2007
F(n + 3) = 2F(n + 2) - F(n), F(n + 4) = 3F(n + 2) - F(n), F(n + 8) = 7F(n + 4) - F(n), F(n + 12) = 18F(n + 6) - F(n). - Paul Curtz, Feb 01 2008
a(2^n) = Product_{i=0..n-2} B(i) where B(i) is A001566. Example 3*7*47 = F(16). - Kenneth J Ramsey, Apr 23 2008
a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} A109466(n,k)*(-1)^(n-k). -Philippe Deléham, Oct 26 2008
a(n) = Sum_{l_1=0..n+1} Sum_{l_2=0..n}...Sum_{l_i=0..n-i}... Sum_{l_n=0..1} delta(l_1,l_2,...,l_i,...,l_n), where delta(l_1,l_2,...,l_i,...,l_n) = 0 if any l_i + l_(i+1) >= 2 for i=1..n-1 and delta(l_1,l_2,...,l_i,...,l_n) = 1 otherwise. - Thomas Wieder, Feb 25 2009
a(n+1) = 2^n sqrt(Product_{k=1..n} cos(k Pi/(n+1))^2+1/4) (Kasteleyn's formula specialized). - Sarah-Marie Belcastro, Jul 04 2009
a(n+1) = Sum_{k=floor(n/2) mod 5} C(n,k) - Sum_{k=floor((n+5)/2) mod 5} C(n,k) = A173125(n) - A173126(n) = |A054877(n)-A052964(n-1)|. - Henry Bottomley, Feb 10 2010
If p[i] = modp(i,2) and if A is 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)=det A. - Milan Janjic, May 02 2010
Limit_{k->oo} F(k+n)/F(k) = (L(n) + F(n)*sqrt(5))/2 with the Lucas numbers L(n) = A000032(n). - Johannes W. Meijer, May 27 2010
For n >= 1, F(n) = round(log_2(2^(phi*F(n-1)) + 2^(phi*F(n-2)))), where phi is the golden ratio. - Vladimir Shevelev, Jun 24 2010, Jun 27 2010
For n >= 1, a(n+1) = ceiling(phi*a(n)), if n is even and a(n+1) = floor(phi*a(n)), if n is odd (phi = golden ratio). - Vladimir Shevelev, Jul 01 2010
a(n) = 2*a(n-2) + a(n-3), n > 2. - Gary Detlefs, Sep 08 2010
a(2^n) = Product_{i=0..n-1} A000032(2^i). - Vladimir Shevelev, Nov 28 2010
a(n)^2 - a(n-1)^2 = a(n+1)*a(n-2), see A121646.
a(n) = sqrt((-1)^k*(a(n+k)^2 - a(k)*a(2n+k))), for any k. - Gary Detlefs, Dec 03 2010
F(2*n) = F(n+2)^2 - F(n+1)^2 - 2*F(n)^2. - Richard R. Forberg, Jun 04 2011
From Artur Jasinski, Nov 17 2011: (Start)
(-1)^(n+1) = F(n)^2 + F(n)*F(1+n) - F(1+n)^2.
F(n) = F(n+2) - 1 + (F(n+1))^4 + 2*(F(n+1)^3*F(n+2)) - (F(n+1)*F(n+2))^2 - 2*F(n+1)(F(n+2))^3 + (F(n+2))^4 - F(n+1). (End)
F(n) = 1 + Sum_{x=1..n-2} F(x). - Joseph P. Shoulak, Feb 05 2012
F(n) = 4*F(n-2) - 2*F(n-3) - F(n-6). - Gary Detlefs, Apr 01 2012
F(n) = round(phi^(n+1)/(phi+2)). - Thomas Ordowski, Apr 20 2012
From Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jun 03 2012: (Start)
G.f.: A(x) = x/(1-x-x^2) = G(0)/sqrt(5) where G(k) = 1 - ((-1)^k)*2^k/(a^k - b*x*a^k*2^k/(b*x*2^k - 2*((-1)^k)*c^k/G(k+1))) and a=3+sqrt(5), b=1+sqrt(5), c=3-sqrt(5); (continued fraction, 3rd kind, 3-step).
Let E(x) be the e.g.f., i.e.,
E(x) = 1*x + (1/2)*x^2 + (1/3)*x^3 + (1/8)*x^4 + (1/24)*x^5 + (1/90)*x^6 + (13/5040)*x^7 + ...; then
E(x) = G(0)/sqrt(5); G(k) = 1 - ((-1)^k)*2^k/(a^k - b*x*a^k*2^k/(b*x*2^k - 2*((-1)^k)*(k+1)*c^k/G(k+1))), where a=3+sqrt(5), b=1+sqrt(5), c=3-sqrt(5); (continued fraction, 3rd kind, 3-step).
(End)
From Hieronymus Fischer, Nov 30 2012: (Start)
F(n) = 1 + Sum_{j_1=1..n-2} 1 + Sum_{j_1=1..n-2} Sum_{j_2=1..j_1-2} 1 + Sum_{j_1=1..n-2} Sum_{j_2=1..j_1-2} Sum_{j_3=1..j_2-2} 1 + ... + Sum_{j_1=1..n-2} Sum_{j_2=1..j_1-2} Sum_{j_3=1..j_2-2} ... Sum_{j_k=1..j_(k-1)-2} 1, where k = floor((n-1)/2).
Example: F(6) = 1 + Sum_{j=1..4} 1 + Sum_{j=1..4} Sum_{k=1..(j-2)} 1 + 0 = 1 + (1 + 1 + 1 + 1) + (1 + (1 + 1)) = 8.
F(n) = Sum_{j=0..k} S(j+1,n-2j), where k = floor((n-1)/2) and the S(j,n) are the n-th j-simplex sums: S(1,n) = 1 is the 1-simplex sum, S(2,n) = Sum_{k=1..n} S(1,k) = 1+1+...+1 = n is the 2-simplex sum, S(3,n) = Sum_{k=1..n} S(2,k) = 1+2+3+...+n is the 3-simplex sum (= triangular numbers = A000217), S(4,n) = Sum_{k=1..n} S(3,k) = 1+3+6+...+n(n+1)/2 is the 4-simplex sum (= tetrahedral numbers = A000292) and so on.
Since S(j,n) = binomial(n-2+j,j-1), the formula above equals the well-known binomial formula, essentially. (End)
G.f.: A(x) = x / (1 - x / (1 - x / (1 + x))). - Michael Somos, Jan 04 2013
Sum_{n >= 1} (-1)^(n-1)/(a(n)*a(n+1)) = 1/phi (phi=golden ratio). - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 22 2013
From Raul Prisacariu, Oct 29 2023: (Start)
For odd k, Sum_{n >= 1} a(k)^2*(-1)^(n-1)/(a(k*n)*a(k*n+k)) = phi^(-k).
For even k, Sum_{n >= 1} a(k)^2/(a(k*n)*a(k*n+k)) = phi^(-k). (End)
From Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 24 2013: (Start)
(1) Expression a(n+1) via a(n): a(n+1) = (a(n) + sqrt(5*(a(n))^2 + 4*(-1)^n))/2;
(2) Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^(k-1)/(a(k)*a(k+1)) = a(n)/a(n+1);
(3) a(n)/a(n+1) = 1/phi + r(n), where |r(n)| < 1/(a(n+1)*a(n+2)). (End)
F(n+1) = F(n)/2 + sqrt((-1)^n + 5*F(n)^2/4), n >= 0. F(n+1) = U_n(i/2)/i^n, (U:= Chebyshev polynomial of the 2nd kind, i=sqrt(-1)). - Bill Gosper, Mar 04 2013
G.f.: -Q(0) where Q(k) = 1 - (1+x)/(1 - x/(x - 1/Q(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Mar 06 2013
G.f.: x - 1 - 1/x + (1/x)/Q(0), where Q(k) = 1 - (k+1)*x/(1 - x/(x - (k+1)/Q(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Apr 23 2013
G.f.: x*G(0), where G(k) = 1 + x*(1+x)/(1 - x*(1+x)/(x*(1+x) + 1/G(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jul 08 2013
G.f.: x^2 - 1 + 2*x^2/(W(0)-2), where W(k) = 1 + 1/(1 - x*(k + x)/( x*(k+1 + x) + 1/W(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Aug 28 2013
G.f.: Q(0) - 1, where Q(k) = 1 + x^2 + (k+2)*x - x*(k+1 + x)/Q(k+1); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Oct 06 2013
Let b(n) = b(n-1) + b(n-2), with b(0) = 0, b(1) = phi. Then, for n >= 2, F(n) = floor(b(n-1)) if n is even, F(n) = ceiling(b(n-1)), if n is odd, with convergence. - Richard R. Forberg, Jan 19 2014
a(n) = Sum_{t1*g(1)+t2*g(2)+...+tn*g(n)=n} multinomial(t1+t2+...+tn,t1,t2,...,tn), where g(k)=2*k-1. - Mircea Merca, Feb 27 2014
F(n) = round(sqrt(F(n-1)^2 + F(n)^2 + F(n+1)^2)/2), for n > 0. This rule appears to apply to any sequence of the form a(n) = a(n-1) + a(n-2), for any two values of a(0) and a(1), if n is sufficiently large. - Richard R. Forberg, Jul 27 2014
F(n) = round(2/(1/F(n) + 1/F(n+1) + 1/F(n+2))), for n > 0. This rule also appears to apply to any sequence of the form a(n) = a(n-1) + a(n-2), for any two values of a(0) and a(1), if n is sufficiently large. - Richard R. Forberg, Aug 03 2014
F(n) = round(1/(Sum_{j>=n+2} 1/F(j))). - Richard R. Forberg, Aug 14 2014
a(n) = hypergeometric([-n/2+1/2, -n/2+1], [-n+1], -4) for n >= 2. - Peter Luschny, Sep 19 2014
Limit_{n -> oo} (log F(n+1)/log F(n))^n = e. - Thomas Ordowski, Oct 06 2014
F(n) = (L(n+1)^2 - L(n-1)^2)/(5*L(n)), where L(n) is A000032(n), with a similar inverse relationship. - Richard R. Forberg, Nov 17 2014
Consider the graph G[1-vertex;1-loop,2-loop] in comment above. Construct the power matrix array T(n,j) = [A^*j]*[S^*(j-1)] where A=(1,1,0,...) and S=(0,1,0,...)(A063524). [* is convolution operation] Define S^*0=I with I=(1,0,...). Then T(n,j) counts n-walks containing (j) loops and a(n-1) = Sum_{j=1..n} T(n,j). - David Neil McGrath, Nov 21 2014
Define F(-n) to be F(n) for n odd and -F(n) for n even. Then for all n and k, F(n) = F(k)*F(n-k+3) - F(k-1)*F(n-k+2) - F(k-2)*F(n-k) + (-1)^k*F(n-2k+2). - Charlie Marion, Dec 04 2014
F(n+k)^2 - L(k)*F(n)*F(n+k) + (-1)^k*F(n)^2 = (-1)^n*F(k)^2, if L(k) = A000032(k). - Alexander Samokrutov, Jul 20 2015
F(2*n) = F(n+1)^2 - F(n-1)^2, similar to Koshy (D) and Forberg 2011, but different. - Hermann Stamm-Wilbrandt, Aug 12 2015
F(n+1) = ceiling( (1/phi)*Sum_{k=0..n} F(k) ). - Tom Edgar, Sep 10 2015
a(n) = (L(n-3) + L(n+3))/10 where L(n)=A000032(n). - J. M. Bergot, Nov 25 2015
From Bob Selcoe, Mar 27 2016: (Start)
F(n) = (F(2n+k+1) - F(n+1)*F(n+k+1))/F(n+k), k >= 0.
Thus when k=0: F(n) = sqrt(F(2n+1) - F(n+1)^2).
F(n) = (F(3n) - F(n+1)^3 + F(n-1)^3)^(1/3).
F(n+2k) = binomial transform of any subsequence starting with F(n). Example F(6)=8: 1*8 = F(6)=8; 1*8 + 1*13 = F(8)=21; 1*8 + 2*13 + 1*21 = F(10)=55; 1*8 + 3*13 + 3*21 + 1*34 = F(12)=144, etc. This formula applies to Fibonacci-type sequences with any two seed values for a(0) and a(1) (e.g., Lucas sequence A000032: a(0)=2, a(1)=1).
(End)
F(n) = L(k)*F(n-k) + (-1)^(k+1)*F(n-2k) for all k >= 0, where L(k) = A000032(k). - Anton Zakharov, Aug 02 2016
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Aug 03 2016: (Start)
a(n) = F_n(1), where F_n(x) are the Fibonacci polynomials.
Inverse binomial transform of A001906.
Number of zeros in substitution system {0 -> 11, 1 -> 1010} at step n from initial string "1" (1 -> 1010 -> 101011101011 -> ...) multiplied by 1/A000079(n). (End)
For n >= 2, a(n) = 2^(n^2+n) - (4^n-2^n-1)*floor(2^(n^2+n)/(4^n-2^n-1)) - 2^n*floor(2^(n^2) - (2^n-1-1/2^n)*floor(2^(n^2+n)/(4^n-2^n-1))). - Benoit Cloitre, Apr 17 2017
f(n+1) = Sum_{j=0..floor(n/2)} Sum_{k=0..j} binomial(n-2j,k)*binomial(j,k). - Tony Foster III, Sep 04 2017
F(n) = Sum_{k=0..floor((n-1)/2)} ( (n-k-1)! / ((n-2k-1)! * k!) ). - Zhandos Mambetaliyev, Nov 08 2017
For x even, F(n) = (F(n+x) + F(n-x))/L(x). For x odd, F(n) = (F(n+x) - F(n-x))/L(x) where n >= x in both cases. Therefore F(n) = F(2*n)/L(n) for n >= 0. - David James Sycamore, May 04 2018
From Isaac Saffold, Jul 19 2018: (Start)
Let [a/p] denote the Legendre symbol. Then, for an odd prime p:
F(p+n) == [5/p]*F([5/p]+n) (mod p), if [5/p] = 1 or -1.
F(p+n) == 3*F(n) (mod p), if [5/p] = 0 (i.e., p = 5).
This is true for negative-indexed terms as well, if this sequence is extended by the negafibonacci numbers (i.e., F(-n) = A039834(n)). (End)
a(n) = A094718(4, n). a(n) = A101220(0, j, n).
a(n) = A090888(0, n+1) = A118654(0, n+1) = A118654(1, n-1) = A109754(0, n) = A109754(1, n-1), for n > 0.
a(n) = (L(n-3) + L(n-2) + L(n-1) + L(n))/5 with L(n)=A000032(n). - Art Baker, Jan 04 2019
F(n) = F(k-1)*F(abs(n-k-2)) + F(k-1)*F(n-k-1) + F(k)*F(abs(n-k-2)) + 2*F(k)*F(n-k-1), for n > k > 0. - Joseph M. Shunia, Aug 12 2019
F(n) = F(n-k+2)*F(k-1) + F(n-k+1)*F(k-2) for all k such that 2 <= k <= n. - Michael Tulskikh, Oct 09 2019
F(n)^2 - F(n+k)*F(n-k) = (-1)^(n+k) * F(k)^2 for 2 <= k <= n [Catalan's identity]. - Hermann Stamm-Wilbrandt, May 07 2021
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = A079586 is the reciprocal Fibonacci constant. - Gennady Eremin, Aug 06 2021
a(n) = Product_{d|n} b(d) = Product_{k=1..n} b(gcd(n,k))^(1/phi(n/gcd(n,k))) = Product_{k=1..n} b(n/gcd(n,k))^(1/phi(n/gcd(n,k))) where b(n) = A061446(n) = primitive part of a(n), phi(n) = A000010(n). - Richard L. Ollerton, Nov 08 2021
a(n) = 2*i^(1-n)*sin(n*arccos(i/2))/sqrt(5), i=sqrt(-1). - Bill Gosper, May 05 2022
a(n) = i^(n-1)*sin(n*c)/sin(c) = i^(n-1)*sin(c*n)*csc(c), where c = Pi/2 + i*arccsch(2). - Peter Luschny, May 23 2022
F(2n) = Sum_{k=1..n} (k/5)*binomial(2n, n+k), where (k/5) is the Legendre or Jacobi Symbol; F(2n+1)= Sum_{k=1..n} (-(k+2)/5)*binomial(2n+1, n+k), where (-(k+2)/5) is the Legendre or Jacobi Symbol. For example, F(10) = 1*binomial(10,6) - 1*binomial(10,7) - 1*binomial(10,8) + 1*binomial(10,9) + 0*binomial(10,10), F(11) = 1*binomial(11,6) - 1*binomial(11,7) + 0*binomial(11,8) - 1*binomial(11,9) + 1*binomial(11,10) + 1*binomial(11,11). - Yike Li, Aug 21 2022
For n > 0, 1/F(n) = Sum_{k>=1} F(n*k)/(F(n+2)^(k+1)). - Diego Rattaggi, Oct 26 2022
From Andrea Pinos, Dec 02 2022: (Start)
For n == 0 (mod 4): F(n) = F((n+2)/2)*( F(n/2) + F((n/2)-2) ) + 1;
For n == 1 (mod 4): F(n) = F((n-1)/2)*( F((n-1)/2) + F(2+(n-1)/2) ) + 1;
For n == 2 (mod 4): F(n) = F((n-2)/2)*( F(n/2) + F((n/2)+2) ) + 1;
For n == 3 (mod 4): F(n) = F((n-1)/2)*( F((n-1)/2) + F(2+(n-1)/2) ) - 1. (End)
F(n) = Sum_{i=0..n-1} F(i)^2 / F(n-1). - Jules Beauchamp, May 03 2025

A001906 F(2n) = bisection of Fibonacci sequence: a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - a(n-2).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 3, 8, 21, 55, 144, 377, 987, 2584, 6765, 17711, 46368, 121393, 317811, 832040, 2178309, 5702887, 14930352, 39088169, 102334155, 267914296, 701408733, 1836311903, 4807526976, 12586269025, 32951280099, 86267571272, 225851433717, 591286729879, 1548008755920
Offset: 0

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Keywords

Comments

Apart from initial term, same as A088305.
Second column of array A102310 and of A028412.
Numbers k such that 5*k^2 + 4 is a square. - Gregory V. Richardson, Oct 13 2002
Apart from initial terms, also Pisot sequences E(3,8), P(3,8), T(3,8). See A008776 for definitions of Pisot sequences.
Binomial transform of A000045. - Paul Barry, Apr 11 2003
Number of walks of length 2n+1 in the path graph P_4 from one end to the other one. Example: a(2)=3 because in the path ABCD we have ABABCD, ABCBCD and ABCDCD. - Emeric Deutsch, Apr 02 2004
Simplest example of a second-order recurrence with the sixth term a square.
Number of (s(0), s(1), ..., s(2n)) such that 0 < s(i) < 5 and |s(i) - s(i-1)| = 1 for i = 1,2,...,2n, s(0) = 1, s(2n) = 3. - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 11 2004
a(n) (for n > 0) is the smallest positive integer that cannot be created by summing at most n values chosen among the previous terms (with repeats allowed). - Andrew Weimholt, Jul 20 2004
All nonnegative integer solutions of Pell equation b(n)^2 - 5*a(n)^2 = +4 together with b(n) = A005248(n), n >= 0. - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 31 2004
a(n+1) is a Chebyshev transform of 3^n (A000244), where the sequence with g.f. G(x) is sent to the sequence with g.f. (1/(1+x^2))G(x/(1+x^2)). - Paul Barry, Oct 25 2004
a(n) is the number of distinct products of matrices A, B, C, in (A+B+C)^n where commutator [A,B] = 0 but C does not commute with A or B. - Paul D. Hanna and Max Alekseyev, Feb 01 2006
Number of binary words with exactly k-1 strictly increasing runs. Example: a(3)=F(6)=8 because we have 0|0,1|0,1|1,0|01,01|0,1|01,01|1 and 01|01. Column sums of A119900. - Emeric Deutsch, Jul 23 2006
See Table 1 on page 411 of Lukovits and Janezic paper. - Parthasarathy Nambi, Aug 22 2006
Inverse: With phi = (sqrt(5) + 1)/2, log_phi((sqrt(5) a(n) + sqrt(5 a(n)^2 + 4))/2) = n. - David W. Cantrell (DWCantrell(AT)sigmaxi.net), Feb 19 2007
[1,3,8,21,55,144,...] is the Hankel transform of [1,1,4,17,75,339,1558,...](see A026378). - Philippe Deléham, Apr 13 2007
The Diophantine equation a(n) = m has a solution (for m >= 1) if and only if floor(arcsinh(sqrt(5)*m/2)/log(phi)) <> floor(arccosh(sqrt(5)*m/2)/log(phi)) where phi is the golden ratio. An equivalent condition is A130259(m) = A130260(m). - Hieronymus Fischer, May 25 2007
a(n+1) = AB^(n)(1), n >= 0, with compositions of Wythoff's complementary A(n):=A000201(n) and B(n)=A001950(n) sequences. See the W. Lang link under A135817 for the Wythoff representation of numbers (with A as 1 and B as 0 and the argument 1 omitted). E.g., 1=`1`, 3=`10`, 8=`100`, 21=`1000`, ..., in Wythoff code.
Equals row sums of triangles A140069, A140736 and A140737. - Gary W. Adamson, May 25 2008
a(n) is also the number of idempotent order-preserving partial transformations (of an n-element chain) of width n (width(alpha) = max(Im(alpha))). Equivalently, it is the number of idempotent order-preserving full transformations (of an n-element chain). - Abdullahi Umar, Sep 08 2008
a(n) is the number of ways that a string of 0,1 and 2 of size (n-1) can be arranged with no 12-pairs. - Udita Katugampola, Sep 24 2008
Starting with offset 1 = row sums of triangle A175011. - Gary W. Adamson, Apr 03 2010
As a fraction: 1/71 = 0.01408450... or 1/9701 = 0.0001030821.... - Mark Dols, May 18 2010
Sum of the products of the elements in the compositions of n (example for n=3: the compositions are 1+1+1, 1+2, 2+1, and 3; a(3) = 1*1*1 + 1*2 + 2*1 + 3 = 8). - Dylon Hamilton, Jun 20 2010, Geoffrey Critzer, Joerg Arndt, Dec 06 2010
a(n) relates to regular polygons with even numbers of edges such that Product_{k=1..(n-2)/2} (1 + 4*cos^2 k*Pi/n) = even-indexed Fibonacci numbers with a(n) relating to the 2*n-gons. The constants as products = roots to even-indexed rows of triangle A152063. For example: a(5) = 55 satisfies the product formula relating to the 10-gon. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 15 2010
Alternatively, product of roots to x^4 - 12x^3 + 51x^2 - 90x + 55, (10th row of triangle A152063) = (4.618...)*(3.618...)*(2.381...)*(1.381...) = 55. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 15 2010
a(n) is the number of generalized compositions of n when there are i different types of i, (i=1,2,...). - Milan Janjic, Aug 26 2010
Starting with "1" = row sums of triangle A180339, and eigensequence of triangle A137710. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 28 2010
a(2) = 3 is the only prime.
Number of nonisomorphic graded posets with 0 and uniform hasse graph of rank n > 0, with exactly 2 elements of each rank level above 0. (Uniform used in the sense of Retakh, Serconek, and Wilson. Graded used in Stanley's sense that every maximal chain has the same length n.) - David Nacin, Feb 13 2012
Pisano period lengths: 1, 3, 4, 3, 10, 12, 8, 6, 12, 30, 5, 12, 14, 24, 20, 12, 18, 12, 9, 30, ... - R. J. Mathar, Aug 10 2012
Solutions (x, y) = (a(n), a(n+1)) satisfying x^2 + y^2 = 3xy + 1. - Michel Lagneau, Feb 01 2014
For n >= 1, a(n) equals the number of 01-avoiding words of length n-1 on alphabet {0,1,2}. - Milan Janjic, Jan 25 2015
With a(0) = 0, for n > 1, a(n) is the smallest number not already in the sequence such that a(n)^2 - a(n-1)^2 is a Fibonacci number. - Derek Orr, Jun 08 2015
Let T be the tree generated by these rules: 0 is in T, and if p is in T, then p + 1 is in T and x*p is in T and y*p is in T. The n-th generation of T consists of A001906(n) polynomials, for n >= 0. - Clark Kimberling, Nov 24 2015
For n > 0, a(n) = exactly the maximum area of a quadrilateral with sides in order of lengths F(n), F(n), L(n), and L(n) with L(n)=A000032(n). - J. M. Bergot, Jan 20 2016
a(n) = twice the area of a triangle with vertices at (L(n+1), L(n+2)), (F(n+1), F(n+1)), and (L(n+2), L(n+1)), with L(n)=A000032(n). - J. M. Bergot, Apr 20 2016
Except for the initial 0, this is the p-INVERT of (1,1,1,1,1,...) for p(S) = 1 - S - S^2; see A291000. - Clark Kimberling, Aug 24 2017
a(n+1) is the number of spanning trees of the graph T_n, where T_n is a sequence of n triangles, where adjacent triangles share an edge. - Kevin Long, May 07 2018
a(n) is the number of ways to partition [n] such that each block is a run of consecutive numbers, and each block has a fixed point, e.g., for n=3, 12|3 with 1 and 3 as fixed points is valid, but 13|2 is not valid as 1 and 3 do not form a run. Consequently, a(n) also counts the spanning trees of the graph given by taking a path with n vertices and adding another vertex adjacent to all of them. - Kevin Long, May 11 2018
From Wolfdieter Lang, May 31 2018: (Start)
The preceding comment can be paraphrased as follows. a(n) is the row sum of the array A305309 for n >= 1. The array A305309(n, k) gives the sum of the products of the block lengths of the set partition of [n] := {1, 2, ..., n} with A048996(n, k) blocks of consecutive numbers, corresponding to the compositions obtained from the k-th partition of n in Abramowitz-Stegun order. See the comments and examples at A305309.
{a(n)} also gives the infinite sequence of nonnegative numbers k for which k * ||k*phi|| < 1/sqrt(5), where the irrational number phi = A001622 (golden section), and ||x|| is the absolute value of the difference between x and the nearest integer. See, e.g., the Havil reference, pp. 171-172. (End)
a(n) is the number of tilings of two n X 1 rectangles joined orthogonally at a common end-square (so to have 2n-1 squares in a right-angle V shape) with only 1 X 1 and 2 X 1 tiles. This is a consequence of F(2n) = F(n+1)*F(n) + F(n)*F(n-1). - Nathaniel Gregg, Oct 10 2021
These are the denominators of the upper convergents to the golden ratio, tau; they are also the numerators of the lower convergents (viz. 1/1 < 3/2 < 8/5 < 21/13 < ... < tau < ... 13/8 < 5/3 < 2/1). - Clark Kimberling, Jan 02 2022
For n > 1, a(n) is the smallest Fibonacci number of unit equilateral triangle tiles needed to make an isosceles trapezoid of height F(n) triangles. - Kiran Ananthpur Bacche, Sep 01 2024

Examples

			G.f. = x + 3*x^2 + 8*x^3 + 21*x^4 + 55*x^5 + 144*x^6 + 377*x^7 + 987*x^8 + ...
a(3) = 8 because there are exactly 8 idempotent order-preserving full transformations on a 3-element chain, namely: (1,2,3)->(1,1,1),(1,2,3)->(2,2,2),(1,2,3)->(3,3,3),(1,2,3)->(1,1,3),(1,2,3)->(2,2,3),(1,2,3)->(1,2,2),(1,2,3)->(1,3,3),(1,2,3)->(1,2,3)-mappings are coordinate-wise. - _Abdullahi Umar_, Sep 08 2008
		

References

  • Mohammad K. Azarian, The Generating Function for the Fibonacci Sequence, Missouri Journal of Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 2, No. 2, Spring 1990, pp. 78-79. Zentralblatt MATH, Zbl 1097.11516.
  • Mohammad K. Azarian, A Generalization of the Climbing Stairs Problem II, Missouri Journal of Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 16, No. 1, Winter 2004, pp. 12-17.
  • A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, id. 2,5,6,14,33,55.
  • R. J. Douglas, Tournaments that admit exactly one Hamiltonian cycle, Proc. London Math. Soc., 21 (1970), 716-730.
  • G. Everest, A. van der Poorten, I. Shparlinski and T. Ward, Recurrence Sequences, Amer. Math. Soc., 2003; see esp. p. 255.
  • A. Gerardin, Reply to Query 4389, L'Intermédiaire des Mathématiciens, 22 (1915), 23.
  • Julian Havil, The Irrationals, Princeton University Press, Princeton and Oxford, 2012, pp. 171-172.
  • Howie, J. M. Combinatorial and probabilistic results in transformation semigroups. Words, languages and combinatorics, II (Kyoto, 1992), 200--206, World Sci. Publ., River Edge, NJ, (1994).
  • Laradji, A. and Umar, A. Combinatorial results for semigroups of order-preserving full transformations. Semigroup Forum 72 (2006), 51-62.
  • I. Lukovits, A. Graovac, E. Kalman, G. Kaptay, P. Nagy, S. Nikolic, J. Sytchev and N. Trinajstich, "Nanotubes: Number of Kekulé Structures and Aromaticity", J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci, vol. 43 (2003), pp. 609-614. See Equation 6 on page 611.
  • T. Mansour, M. Shattuck, A statistic on n-color compositions and related sequences, Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. (Math. Sci.) Vol. 124, No. 2, May 2014, pp. 127-140.
  • H. Mathieu, Query 3932, L'Intermédiaire des Mathématiciens, 18 (1911), 222. - N. J. A. Sloane, Mar 08 2022
  • I. Niven and H. S. Zuckerman, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers. 2nd ed., Wiley, NY, 1966, p. 101.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, Primes in Lucas sequences (Chap 4), in 'My Numbers, My Friends', Springer-Verlag 2000 NY, page 27.
  • 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).
  • R. Stanley, Enumerative combinatorics, Vol. 1, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1997, pp. 96-100.

Crossrefs

Fibonacci A000045 = union of this sequence and A001519.
Inverse sequences A130259 and A130260.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a001906 n = a001906_list !! n
    a001906_list =
       0 : 1 : zipWith (-) (map (* 3) $ tail a001906_list) a001906_list
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 03 2011
    
  • Magma
    [Fibonacci(2*n): n in [0..30]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Sep 10 2014
  • Maple
    with(combstruct): SeqSeqSeqL := [T, {T=Sequence(S, card > 0), S=Sequence(U, card > 1), U=Sequence(Z, card >0)}, unlabeled]: seq(count(SeqSeqSeqL, size=n+1), n=0..28); # Zerinvary Lajos, Apr 04 2009
    H := (n, a, b) -> hypergeom([a - n/2, b - n/2], [1 - n], -4):
    a := n -> `if`(n = 0, 0, H(2*n, 1, 1/2)):
    seq(simplify(a(n)), n=0..30); # Peter Luschny, Sep 03 2019
    A001906 := proc(n)
        combinat[fibonacci](2*n) ;
    end proc:
    seq(A001906(n),n=0..20) ; # R. J. Mathar, Jan 11 2024
  • Mathematica
    f[n_] := Fibonacci[2n]; Array[f, 28, 0] (* or *)
    LinearRecurrence[{3, -1}, {0, 1}, 28] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jul 13 2011 *)
    Take[Fibonacci[Range[0,60]],{1,-1,2}] (* Harvey P. Dale, May 23 2012 *)
    Table[ ChebyshevU[n-1, 3/2], {n, 0, 30}] (* Jean-François Alcover, Jan 25 2013, after Michael Somos *)
    CoefficientList[Series[(x)/(1 - 3x + x^2), {x, 0, 30}], x] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Sep 10 2014 *)
  • Maxima
    makelist(fib(2*n),n,0,30); /* Martin Ettl, Oct 21 2012 */
    
  • MuPAD
    numlib::fibonacci(2*n) $ n = 0..35; // Zerinvary Lajos, May 09 2008
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = fibonacci(2*n)}; /* Michael Somos, Dec 06 2002 */
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = subst( poltchebi(n+1)*4 - poltchebi(n)*6, x, 3/2)/5}; /* Michael Somos, Dec 06 2002 */
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = polchebyshev( n-1, 2, 3/2)}; /* Michael Somos Jun 18 2011 */
    
  • PARI
    Vec(x/(1-3*x+x^2)+O(x^99)) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Oct 24 2012
    
  • Python
    def a(n, adict={0:0, 1:1}):
        if n in adict:
            return adict[n]
        adict[n]=3*a(n-1) - a(n-2)
        return adict[n] # David Nacin, Mar 04 2012
    
  • Sage
    [lucas_number1(n,3,1) for n in range(27)] # Zerinvary Lajos, Jun 25 2008
    
  • Sage
    [fibonacci(2*n) for n in range(0, 28)] # Zerinvary Lajos, May 15 2009
    

Formula

G.f.: x / (1 - 3*x + x^2). - Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - a(n-2) = A000045(2*n).
a(n) = -a(-n).
a(n) = A060921(n-1, 0), n >= 1.
a(n) = sqrt((A005248(n)^2 - 4)/5).
a(n) = A007598(n) - A007598(n-2), n > 1.
a(n) = (ap^n - am^n)/(ap-am), with ap := (3+sqrt(5))/2, am := (3-sqrt(5))/2.
Invert transform of natural numbers: a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} k*a(n-k), a(0) = 1. - Vladeta Jovovic, Apr 27 2001
a(n) = S(n-1, 3) with S(n, x) = U(n, x/2) Chebyshev's polynomials of the 2nd kind, see A049310.
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n, k)*F(k). - Benoit Cloitre, Sep 03 2002
Limit_{n->infinity} a(n)/a(n-1) = 1 + phi = (3 + sqrt(5))/2. This sequence includes all of the elements of A033888 combined with A033890.
a(0)=0, a(1)=1, a(2)=3, a(n)*a(n-2) + 1 = a(n-1)^2. - Benoit Cloitre, Dec 06 2002
a(n) = n + Sum_{k=0..n-1} Sum_{i=0..k} a(i) = n + A054452(n). - Benoit Cloitre, Jan 26 2003
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} binomial(n+k-1, n-k). - Vladeta Jovovic, Mar 23 2003
E.g.f.: (2/sqrt(5))*exp(3*x/2)*sinh(sqrt(5)*x/2). - Paul Barry, Apr 11 2003
Second diagonal of array defined by T(i, 1) = T(1, j) = 1, T(i, j) = Max(T(i-1, j) + T(i-1, j-1); T(i-1, j-1) + T(i, j-1)). - Benoit Cloitre, Aug 05 2003
a(n) = F(n)*L(n) = A000045(n)*A000032(n). - Lekraj Beedassy, Nov 17 2003
F(2n+2) = 1, 3, 8, ... is the binomial transform of F(n+2). - Paul Barry, Apr 24 2004
Partial sums of A001519(n). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 11 2004
a(n) = Sum_{i=0..n-1} binomial(2*n-1-i, i)*5^(n-i-1)*(-1)^i. - Mario Catalani (mario.catalani(AT)unito.it), Jul 23 2004
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n+k, n-k-1) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n+k, 2k+1).
a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} binomial(n-k, k)*(-1)^k*3^(n-2*k). - Paul Barry, Oct 25 2004
a(n) = (n*L(n) - F(n))/5 = Sum_{k=0..n-1} (-1)^n*L(2*n-2*k-1).
The i-th term of the sequence is the entry (1, 2) in the i-th power of the 2 X 2 matrix M = ((1, 1), (1, 2)). - Simone Severini, Oct 15 2005
Computation suggests that this sequence is the Hankel transform of A005807. The Hankel transform of {a(n)} is Det[{{a(1), ..., a(n)}, {a(2), ..., a(n+1)}, ..., {a(n), ..., a(2n-1)}}]. - John W. Layman, Jul 21 2000
a(n+1) = (A005248(n+1) - A001519(n))/2. - Creighton Dement, Aug 15 2004
a(n+1) = Sum_{i=0..n} Sum_{j=0..n} binomial(n-i, j)*binomial(n-j, i). - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 20 2005
a(n) = (2/sqrt(5))*sinh(2*n*psi), where psi:=log(phi) and phi=(1+sqrt(5))/2. - Hieronymus Fischer, Apr 24 2007
a(n) = ((phi+1)^n - A001519(n))/phi with phi=(1+sqrt(5))/2. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 22 2007
Row sums of triangle A135871. - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 02 2007
a(n)^2 = Sum_{k=1..n} a(2*k-1). This is a property of any sequence S(n) such that S(n) = B*S(n-1) - S(n-2) with S(0) = 0 and S(1) = 1 including {0,1,2,3,...} where B = 2. - Kenneth J Ramsey, Mar 23 2008
a(n) = 1/sqrt(5)*(phi^(2*n+2) - phi^(-2*n-2)), where phi = (1+sqrt(5))/2, the golden ratio. - Udita Katugampola (SIU), Sep 24 2008
If p[i] = i and if A is 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) = det(A). - Milan Janjic, May 02 2010
If p[i] = Stirling2(i,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
a(n) = F(2*n+10) mod F(2*n+5).
a(n) = 1 + a(n-1) + Sum_{i=1..n-1} a(i), with a(0)=0. - Gary W. Adamson, Feb 19 2011
a(n) is equal to the permanent of the (n-1) X (n-1) Hessenberg matrix with 3's along the main diagonal, i's along the superdiagonal and the subdiagonal (i is the imaginary unit), and 0's everywhere else. - John M. Campbell, Jun 09 2011
a(n), n > 1 is equal to the determinant of an (n-x) X (n-1) tridiagonal matrix with 3's in the main diagonal, 1's in the super and subdiagonals, and the rest 0's. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 27 2011
a(n) = b such that Integral_{x=0..Pi/2} sin(n*x)/(3/2-cos(x)) dx = c + b*log(3). - Francesco Daddi, Aug 01 2011
a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} A101950(n,k)*2^k. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 10 2012
G.f.: A(x) = x/(1-3*x+x^2) = G(0)/sqrt(5); where G(k)= 1 -(a^k)/(1 - b*x/(b*x - 2*(a^k)/G(k+1))), a = (7-3*sqrt(5))/2, b = 3+sqrt(5), if |x|<(3-sqrt(5))/2 = 0.3819660...; (continued fraction 3 kind, 3-step ). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jun 25 2012
a(n) = 2^n*b(n;1/2) = -b(n;-1), where b(n;d), n=0,1,...,d, denote the delta-Fibonacci numbers defined in comments to A000045 (see also Witula's et al. papers). - Roman Witula, Jul 12 2012
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = 1 + sqrt(5). - Peter Bala, Dec 23 2012
Product_{n>=2} (1 - 1/a(n)) = (1/6)*(1 + sqrt(5)). - Peter Bala, Dec 23 2012
G.f.: x/(1-2*x) + x^2/(1-2*x)/(Q(0)-x) where Q(k) = 1 - x/(x*k+1)/Q(k+1); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Feb 23 2013
G.f.: G(0)/2 - 1, where G(k) = 1 + 1/( 1 - x/(x + (1-x)^2/G(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jul 16 2013
G.f.: x*G(0)/(2-3*x), where G(k) = 1 + 1/( 1 - x*(5*k-9)/(x*(5*k-4) - 6/G(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jul 17 2013
Sum_{n>=1} 1/(a(n) + 1/a(n)) = 1. Compare with A001519, A049660 and A049670. - Peter Bala, Nov 29 2013
a(n) = U(n-1,3/2) where U(n-1,x) is Chebyshev polynomial of the second kind. - Milan Janjic, Jan 25 2015
The o.g.f. A(x) satisfies A(x) + A(-x) + 6*A(x)*A(-x) = 0. The o.g.f. for A004187 equals -A(sqrt(x))*A(-sqrt(x)). - Peter Bala, Apr 02 2015
For n > 1, a(n) = (3*F(n+1)^2 + 2*F(n-2)*F(n+1) - F(n-2)^2)/4. - J. M. Bergot, Feb 16 2016
For n > 3, a(n) = floor(MA) - 4 for n even and floor(MA) + 5 for n odd. MA is the maximum area of a quadrilateral with lengths of sides in order L(n), L(n), F(n-3), F(n+3), with L(n)=A000032(n). The ratio of the longer diagonal to the shorter approaches 5/3. - J. M. Bergot, Feb 16 2016
a(n+1) = Sum_{j=0..n} Sum_{k=0..j} binomial(n-j,k)*binomial(j,k)*2^(j-k). - Tony Foster III, Sep 18 2017
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n-1} Sum_{i=0..n-1} C(k+i,k-i). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Sep 21 2017
a(n) = Sum_{k=1..A000041(n)} A305309(n, k), n >= 1. Also row sums of triangle A078812.- Wolfdieter Lang, May 31 2018
a(n) = H(2*n, 1, 1/2) for n > 0 where H(n, a, b) -> hypergeom([a - n/2, b - n/2], [1 - n], -4). - Peter Luschny, Sep 03 2019
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = A153386. - Amiram Eldar, Oct 04 2020
a(n) = A249450(n) + 2. - Leo Tavares, Oct 10 2021
a(n) = -2/(sqrt(5)*tan(2*arctan(phi^(2*n)))), where phi = A001622 is the golden ratio. - Diego Rattaggi, Nov 21 2021
a(n) = sinh(2*n*arcsinh(1/2))/sqrt(5/4). - Peter Luschny, May 21 2022
From Amiram Eldar, Dec 02 2024: (Start)
Product_{n>=1} (1 - (-1)^n/a(n)) = 1 + 1/sqrt(5) (A344212).
Product_{n>=2} (1 + (-1)^n/a(n)) = (5/6) * (1 + 1/sqrt(5)). (End)
a(n) = Sum_{k>=0} Fibonacci(2*n*k)/(Lucas(2*n)^(k+1)). - Diego Rattaggi, Jan 12 2025
Sum_{n>=0} a(n)/3^n = 3. - Diego Rattaggi, Jan 20 2025

A002530 a(n) = 4*a(n-2) - a(n-4) for n > 1, a(n) = n for n = 0, 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 1, 3, 4, 11, 15, 41, 56, 153, 209, 571, 780, 2131, 2911, 7953, 10864, 29681, 40545, 110771, 151316, 413403, 564719, 1542841, 2107560, 5757961, 7865521, 21489003, 29354524, 80198051, 109552575, 299303201, 408855776, 1117014753, 1525870529, 4168755811
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Denominators of continued fraction convergents to sqrt(3), for n >= 1.
Also denominators of continued fraction convergents to sqrt(3) - 1. See A048788 for numerators. - N. J. A. Sloane, Dec 17 2007. Convergents are 1, 2/3, 3/4, 8/11, 11/15, 30/41, 41/56, 112/153, ...
Consider the mapping f(a/b) = (a + 3*b)/(a + b). Taking a = b = 1 to start with and carrying out this mapping repeatedly on each new (reduced) rational number gives the following sequence 1/1, 2/1, 5/3, 7/4, 19/11, ... converging to 3^(1/2). Sequence contains the denominators. The same mapping for N, i.e., f(a/b) = (a + Nb)/(a + b) gives fractions converging to N^(1/2). - Amarnath Murthy, Mar 22 2003
Sqrt(3) = 2/2 + 2/3 + 2/(3*11) + 2/(11*41) + 2/(41*153) + 2/(153*571), ...; the sum of the first 6 terms of this series = 1.7320490367..., while sqrt(3) = 1.7320508075... - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 15 2007
From Clark Kimberling, Aug 27 2008: (Start)
Related convergents (numerator/denominator):
lower principal convergents: A001834/A001835
upper principal convergents: A001075/A001353
intermediate convergents: A005320/A001075
principal and intermediate convergents: A143642/A140827
lower principal and intermediate convergents: A143643/A005246. (End)
Row sums of triangle A152063 = (1, 3, 4, 11, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 26 2008
From Alois P. Heinz, Apr 13 2011: (Start)
Also number of domino tilings of the 3 X (n-1) rectangle with upper left corner removed iff n is even. For n=4 the 4 domino tilings of the 3 X 3 rectangle with upper left corner removed are:
. ._. . ._. . ._. . ._.
.|__| .|__| .| | | .|___|
| |_| | | | | | ||| |_| |
||__| |||_| ||__| |_|_| (End)
This is the sequence of Lehmer numbers u_n(sqrt(R),Q) with the parameters R = 2 and Q = -1. It is a strong divisibility sequence, that is, gcd(a(n),a(m)) = a(gcd(n,m)) for all natural numbers n and m. - Peter Bala, Apr 18 2014
2^(-floor(n/2))*(1 + sqrt(3))^n = A002531(n) + a(n)*sqrt(3); integers in the real quadratic number field Q(sqrt(3)). - Wolfdieter Lang, Feb 11 2018
Let T(n) = 2^(n mod 2), U(n) = a(n), V(n) = A002531(n), x(n) = V(n)/U(n). Then T(n*m) * U(n+m) = U(n)*V(m) + U(m)*V(n), T(n*m) * V(n+m) = 3*U(n)*U(m) + V(m)*V(n), x(n+m) = (3 + x(n)*x(m))/(x(n) + x(m)). - Michael Somos, Nov 29 2022

Examples

			Convergents to sqrt(3) are: 1, 2, 5/3, 7/4, 19/11, 26/15, 71/41, 97/56, 265/153, 362/209, 989/571, 1351/780, 3691/2131, ... = A002531/A002530 for n >= 1.
1 + 1/(1 + 1/(2 + 1/(1 + 1/2))) = 19/11 so a(5) = 11.
G.f. = x + x^2 + 3*x^3 + 4*x^4 + 11*x^5 + 15*x^6 + 41*x^7 + ... - _Michael Somos_, Mar 18 2022
		

References

  • Serge Lang, Introduction to Diophantine Approximations, Addison-Wesley, New York, 1966.
  • Russell Lyons, A bird's-eye view of uniform spanning trees and forests, in Microsurveys in Discrete Probability, AMS, 1998.
  • I. Niven and H. S. Zuckerman, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers. 2nd ed., Wiley, NY, 1966, p. 181.
  • Murat Sahin and Elif Tan, Conditional (strong) divisibility sequences, Fib. Q., 56 (No. 1, 2018), 18-31.
  • 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).
  • A. Tarn, Approximations to certain square roots and the series of numbers connected therewith, Mathematical Questions and Solutions from the Educational Times, 1 (1916), 8-12.

Crossrefs

Cf. A002531 (numerators of convergents to sqrt(3)), A048788, A003297.
Bisections: A001353 and A001835.
Cf. A152063.
Analog for sqrt(m): A000129 (m=2), A001076 (m=5), A041007 (m=6), A041009 (m=7), A041011 (m=8), A005668 (m=10), A041015 (m=11), A041017 (m=12), ..., A042935 (m=999), A042937 (m=1000).

Programs

  • Magma
    I:=[0,1,1,3]; [n le 4 select I[n] else 4*Self(n-2) - Self(n-4): n in [1..50]]; // G. C. Greubel, Feb 25 2019
    
  • Maple
    a := proc(n) option remember; if n=0 then 0 elif n=1 then 1 elif n=2 then 1 elif n=3 then 3 else 4*a(n-2)-a(n-4) fi end; [ seq(a(i),i=0..50) ];
    A002530:=-(-1-z+z**2)/(1-4*z**2+z**4); # conjectured (correctly) by Simon Plouffe in his 1992 dissertation
  • Mathematica
    Join[{0},Table[Denominator[FromContinuedFraction[ContinuedFraction[Sqrt[3],n]]], {n,1,50}]] (* Stefan Steinerberger, Apr 01 2006 *)
    Join[{0},Denominator[Convergents[Sqrt[3],50]]] (* or *) LinearRecurrence[ {0,4,0,-1},{0,1,1,3},50] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jan 29 2013 *)
    a[ n_] := If[n<0, -(-1)^n, 1] SeriesCoefficient[ x*(1+x-x^2)/(1-4*x^2+x^4), {x, 0, Abs@n}]; (* Michael Somos, Apr 18 2019 *)
    a[ n_] := ChebyshevU[n-1, Sqrt[-1/2]]*Sqrt[2]^(Mod[n, 2]-1)/I^(n-1) //Simplify; (* Michael Somos, Nov 29 2022 *)
  • PARI
    {a(n) = if( n<0, -(-1)^n * a(-n), contfracpnqn(vector(n, i, 1 + (i>1) * (i%2)))[2, 1])}; /* Michael Somos, Jun 05 2003 */
    
  • PARI
    { for (n=0, 50, a=contfracpnqn(vector(n, i, 1+(i>1)*(i%2)))[2, 1]; write("b002530.txt", n, " ", a); ); } \\ Harry J. Smith, Jun 01 2009
    
  • PARI
    my(w=quadgen(12)); A002530(n)=real((2+w)^(n\/2)*if(bittest(n,0),1-w/3,w/3));
    apply(A002530, [0..30]) \\ M. F. Hasler, Nov 04 2019
    
  • Python
    from functools import cache
    @cache
    def a(n): return [0, 1, 1, 3][n] if n < 4 else 4*a(n-2) - a(n-4)
    print([a(n) for n in range(36)]) # Michael S. Branicky, Nov 13 2022
  • Sage
    (x*(1+x-x^2)/(1-4*x^2+x^4)).series(x, 50).coefficients(x, sparse=False) # G. C. Greubel, Feb 25 2019
    

Formula

G.f.: x*(1 + x - x^2)/(1 - 4*x^2 + x^4).
a(n) = 4*a(n-2) - a(n-4). [Corrected by László Szalay, Feb 21 2014]
a(n) = -(-1)^n * a(-n) for all n in Z, would satisfy the same recurrence relation. - Michael Somos, Jun 05 2003
a(2*n) = a(2*n-1) + a(2*n-2), a(2*n+1) = 2*a(2*n) + a(2*n-1).
From Benoit Cloitre, Dec 15 2002: (Start)
a(2*n) = ((2 + sqrt(3))^n - (2 - sqrt(3))^n)/(2*sqrt(3)).
a(2*n) = A001353(n).
a(2*n-1) = ceiling((1 + 1/sqrt(3))/2*(2 + sqrt(3))^n) = ((3 + sqrt(3))^(2*n - 1) + (3 - sqrt(3))^(2*n - 1))/6^n.
a(2*n-1) = A001835(n). (End)
a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} binomial(n - k, k) * 2^floor((n - 2*k)/2). - Paul Barry, Jul 13 2004
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} binomial(floor(n/2) + k, floor((n - 1)/2 - k))*2^k. - Paul Barry, Jun 22 2005
G.f.: (sqrt(6) + sqrt(3))/12*Q(0), where Q(k) = 1 - a/(1 + 1/(b^(2*k) - 1 - b^(2*k)/(c + 2*a*x/(2*x - g*m^(2*k)/(1 + a/(1 - 1/(b^(2*k + 1) + 1 - b^(2*k + 1)/(h - 2*a*x/(2*x + g*m^(2*k + 1)/Q(k + 1)))))))))). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jun 21 2012
a(n) = (alpha^n - beta^n)/(alpha - beta) for n odd, and a(n) = (alpha^n - beta^n)/(alpha^2 - beta^2) for n even, where alpha = 1/2*(sqrt(2) + sqrt(6)) and beta = (1/2)*(sqrt(2) - sqrt(6)). Cf. A108412. - Peter Bala, Apr 18 2014
a(n) = (-sqrt(2)*i)^n*S(n, sqrt(2)*i)*2^(-floor(n/2)) = A002605(n)*2^(-floor(n/2)), n >= 0, with i = sqrt(-1) and S the Chebyshev polynomials (A049310). - Wolfdieter Lang, Feb 10 2018
a(n+1)*a(n+2) - a(n+3)*a(n) = (-1)^n, n >= 0. - Kai Wang, Feb 06 2020
E.g.f.: sinh(sqrt(3/2)*x)*(sinh(x/sqrt(2)) + sqrt(2)*cosh(x/sqrt(2)))/sqrt(3). - Stefano Spezia, Feb 07 2020
a(n) = ((1 + sqrt(3))^n - (1 - sqrt(3))^n)/(2*2^floor(n/2))/sqrt(3) = A002605(n)/2^floor(n/2). - Robert FERREOL, Apr 13 2023

Extensions

Definition edited by M. F. Hasler, Nov 04 2019

A123965 Triangle read by rows: T(0,0)=1; T(n,k) is the coefficient of x^k in the polynomial (-1)^n*p(n,x), where p(n,x) is the characteristic polynomial of the n X n tridiagonal matrix with 3's on the main diagonal and -1's on the super- and subdiagonal (n >= 1; 0 <= k <= n).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, -1, 8, -6, 1, 21, -25, 9, -1, 55, -90, 51, -12, 1, 144, -300, 234, -86, 15, -1, 377, -954, 951, -480, 130, -18, 1, 987, -2939, 3573, -2305, 855, -183, 21, -1, 2584, -8850, 12707, -10008, 4740, -1386, 245, -24, 1, 6765, -26195, 43398, -40426, 23373, -8715, 2100, -316, 27, -1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gary W. Adamson and Roger L. Bagula, Oct 28 2006

Keywords

Comments

Reversed polynomials = bisection of A152063: (1; 1,3; 1,6,8; 1,9,25,21; ...) having the following property: even-indexed Fibonacci numbers = Product_{k=1..n-2/2} (1 + 4*cos^2 k*Pi/n); n relating to regular polygons with an even number of edges. Example: The roots to x^3 - 9*x^2 + 25*x - 21 relate to the octagon and are such that the product with k=1,2,3 = (4.414213...)*(3)*(1.585786...) = 21. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 15 2010

Examples

			Polynomials p(n, x):
    1,
    3 -     x,
    8 -   6*x +     x^2,
   21 -  25*x +   9*x^2 -     x^3,
   55 -  90*x +  51*x^2 -  12*x^3 +    x^4,
  144 - 300*x + 234*x^2 -  86*x^3 +  15*x^4 -    x^5,
  377 - 954*x + 951*x^2 - 480*x^3 + 130*x^4 - 18*x^5 + x^6,
  ...
Triangle begins:
     1;
     3,     -1;
     8,     -6,     1;
    21,    -25,     9,     -1;
    55,    -90,    51,    -12,     1;
   144,   -300,   234,    -86,    15,    -1;
   377,   -954,   951,   -480,   130,   -18,    1;
   987,  -2939,  3573,  -2305,   855,  -183,   21,   -1;
  2584,  -8850, 12707, -10008,  4740, -1386,  245,  -24,  1;
  6765, -26195, 43398, -40426, 23373, -8715, 2100, -316, 27, -1;
  ...
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Magma
    m:=12;
    p:= func< n,x | Evaluate(ChebyshevU(n+1), (3-x)/2) >;
    R:=PowerSeriesRing(Integers(), m+2);
    A123965:= func< n,k | Coefficient(R!( p(n,x) ), k) >;
    [A123965(n,k): k in [0..n], n in [0..m]]; // G. C. Greubel, Aug 20 2023
    
  • Maple
    with(linalg): a:=proc(i,j) if j=i then 3 elif abs(i-j)=1 then -1 else 0 fi end: for n from 1 to 10 do p[n]:=(-1)^n*charpoly(matrix(n,n,a),x) od: 1; for n from 1 to 10 do seq(coeff(p[n],x,j),j=0..n) od; # yields sequence in triangular form
  • Mathematica
    (* First program *)
    T[n_, m_]:= If[n==m, 3, If[n==m-1 || n==m+1, -1, 0]];
    M[d_]:= Table[T[n, m], {n,d}, {m,d}];
    Table[M[d], {d,10}];
    Table[Det[M[d] - x*IdentityMatrix[d]], {d,10}];
    Join[{{3}}, Table[CoefficientList[Det[M[d] - x*IdentityMatrix[d]], x], {d,10}]]//Flatten
    (* Second program *)
    Table[CoefficientList[ChebyshevU[n, (3-x)/2], x], {n,0,12}]//Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, Aug 20 2023 *)
  • SageMath
    def A123965(n,k): return ( chebyshev_U(n, (3-x)/2) ).series(x, n+2).list()[k]
    flatten([[A123965(n,k) for k in range(n+1)] for n in range(13)]) # G. C. Greubel, Aug 20 2023

Formula

T(n, 0) = Fibonacci(2*n+2) = A001906(n+1).
Equals coefficients of the polynomials p(n,x) = (3-x)*p(n-1,x) - p(n-2,x), with p(0, x) = 1, p(1, x) = 3-x. - Roger L. Bagula, Oct 31 2006
From G. C. Greubel, Aug 20 2023: (Start)
T(n, k) = [x^k]( ChebyshevU(n, (3-x)/2) ).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n, k) = n+1.
Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^k*T(n, k) = A001353(n+1).
Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} T(n-k, k) = A000225(n+1).
Sum_{k=0..floor(n/2)} (-1)^k*T(n-k, k) = A000244(n). (End)

Extensions

Edited by N. J. A. Sloane, Nov 24 2006

A162997 Array A(n,k) read by antidiagonals downward (n >= 0, k >= 1): the bottom-right element of the 2 X 2 matrix [1,n; 1,n+1] raised to k-th power.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 5, 3, 1, 13, 11, 4, 1, 34, 41, 19, 5, 1, 89, 153, 92, 29, 6, 1, 233, 571, 436, 169, 41, 7, 1, 610, 2131, 2089, 985, 281, 55, 8, 1, 1597, 7953, 10009, 5741, 1926, 433, 71, 9
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gary W. Adamson, Jul 19 2009

Keywords

Comments

With k=0 column added, becomes A094954.
Also, A(n,k) is the top-left element of the same 2 X 2 matrix raised to (k+1)-th power.
Also, A(n,k) is the denominator of the rational number which has continued fraction expansion consisting of k repeats of [1, n]. Example: the row (3, 11, 41, ...) is extracted from denominators of the continued fractions [0; 1, 2], [0; 1, 2, 1, 2], ... = 2/3, 8/11, ...
Also, A(n,k)=Product_{i=1..k} (n+2+2*cos(2*Pi*i/(2*k+1))). This is somehow connected to the diagonal product formulas for (2*k+1)-gons found by Steinbach.
Row sums of the triangle = A162998: (1, 3, 9, 29, 100, 369, 1458, ...).

Examples

			The array begins:
1,...1,...1,....1,....1,.....1,.....1,...
2,...5,..13,...34,...89,...233....610,...
3,..11,..41,..153,..571,..2131,..........
4,..19,..91,..436,.2089,.................
5,..29,.169,..985,.......................
6,..41,.281,.............................
7,..55,..................................
8,.......................................
...
		

Crossrefs

Extensions

Spelling corrected by Jason G. Wurtzel, Aug 22 2010
Edited by Andrey Zabolotskiy, Sep 18 2017

A125076 Triangle with trigonometric properties.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 3, 5, 1, 5, 8, 13, 1, 6, 19, 21, 34, 1, 8, 25, 65, 55, 89, 1, 9, 42, 90, 210, 144, 233, 1, 11, 51, 183, 300, 654, 377, 610, 1, 12, 74, 234, 717, 954, 1985, 987, 1597, 1, 14, 86, 394, 951, 2622
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gary W. Adamson, Nov 18 2006

Keywords

Comments

This triangle is #3 in an infinite set, where Pascal's triangle = #2. Generally, the infinite set is constrained by two properties: For triangle N, row sums are powers of N and upward sloping diagonals have roots equal to N + 2*cos(2*Pi/Q).
The triangle may be constructed by considering the rows of A152063 as upward sloping diagonals. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 26 2008

Examples

			First few rows of the triangle are:
  1;
  1, 2;
  1, 3,  5;
  1, 5,  8, 13;
  1, 6, 19, 21,  34;
  1, 8, 25, 65,  55,  89;
  1, 9, 42, 90, 210, 144, 233;
  ...
For example, the upward-sloping diagonal (1, 8, 19, 13) is derived from x^3 - 8x^2 + 19x - 13, characteristic polynomial of the 3 X 3 matrix [2, 1, 0; 1, 3, 1;, 0, 1, 3], having an eigenvalue of 3 + 2*cos(2*Pi/7). The next upward-sloping diagonal is (1, 9, 25, 21), derived from the characteristic polynomial x^3 - 9x^2 + 25x - 21 and the matrix [3, 1, 0; 1, 3, 1; 0, 1, 3]. An eigenvalue of this matrix and a root of the corresponding characteristic polynomial is 4.414213562... = 3 + 2*cos(2*Pi/8).
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A125077, A125078, A000244 (row sums).
Cf. A152063. - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 26 2008

Formula

Upward sloping diagonals are alternating (unsigned) characteristic polynomial coefficients of two forms of matrices: all 1's in the super and subdiagonals and (2,3,3,3,...) in the main diagonal and the other form all 1's in the super and subdiagonals and (3,3,3,...) in the main diagonal.

A126124 Triangle, matrix inverse of A124733, companion to A123965.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, -2, 1, 5, -5, 1, -13, 19, -8, 1, 34, -65, 42, -11, 1, -89, 210, -183, 74, -14, 1, 233, -654, 717, -394, 115, -17, 1, -610, 1985, -2622, 1825, -725, 165, -20, 1, 1597, -5911, 9134, -7703, 3885, -1203, 224, -23, 1
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gary W. Adamson, Dec 17 2006

Keywords

Comments

Left border (unsigned) = odd-indexed Fibonacci numbers. Left border (unsigned) of A123965 = even-indexed Fibonacci numbers.
Subtriangle of the triangle T(n,k) given by [0,-2,-1/2,-1/2,0,0,0,0,...] DELTA [1,0,1/2,-1/2,0,0,0,0,0,...] where DELTA is the operator defined in A084938. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 02 2007
Equals A129818*A130595 as lower triangular matrices. - Philippe Deléham, Oct 26 2007
Reversals = bisection of triangle A152063: (1; 1,2; 1,5,5; ...) having the following property: Product_{k=1..floor((n-1)/2)} (1 + 4*cos^2 k*2Pi/n) = the odd-indexed Fibonacci numbers. Example: x^3 - 8x^2 - 19x + 13 relates to the heptagon, and with k=1,2,3,..., the product = 13. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 15 2010
Apart from signs, equals A123971.
Matrix inverse of A124733.

Examples

			First few rows of the triangle are:
    1;
   -2,    1;
    5,   -5,    1;
  -13,   19,   -8,    1;
   34,  -65,   42,  -11,    1;
  -89,  210, -183,   74,  -14,    1;
  ...
Triangle (n >= 0 and 0 <= k <= n) [0,-2,-1/2,-1/2,0,0,0,0,0,...] DELTA [1,0,1/2,-1/2,0,0,0,0,0,...] begins:
  1;
  0,    1;
  0,   -2,    1;
  0,    5,   -5,    1;
  0,  -13,   19,   -8,    1;
  0,   34,  -65,   42,  -11,    1;
  0,  -89,  210, -183,   74,  -14,    1;
  0,  233, -654,  717, -394,  115,  -17,    1;
		

Crossrefs

Formula

Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^(n-k)*T(n,k) = A001835(n). - Philippe Deléham, Jul 14 2007
T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) - 3*T(n-1,k) - T(n-2,k). - Philippe Deléham, Dec 13 2011
T(n,k) = (-1)^(n+k)*Sum_{m=k..n} binomial(m,k)*binomial(m+n,2*m). - Wadim Zudilin, Jan 11 2012
G.f.: (1+x)*x*y/(1+3*x+x^2-x*y). - R. J. Mathar, Aug 11 2015

Extensions

Corrected by Philippe Deléham, Jul 14 2007
More terms from Philippe Deléham, Dec 13 2011

A123971 Triangle T(n,k), read by rows, defined by T(n,k)=3*T(n-1,k)-T(n-1,k-1)-T(n-2,k), T(0,0)=1, T(1,0)=2, T(1,1)=-1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, -1, 5, -5, 1, 13, -19, 8, -1, 34, -65, 42, -11, 1, 89, -210, 183, -74, 14, -1, 233, -654, 717, -394, 115, -17, 1, 610, -1985, 2622, -1825, 725, -165, 20, -1, 1597, -5911, 9134, -7703, 3885, -1203, 224, -23, 1, 4181, -17345, 30691, -30418, 18633, -7329
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gary W. Adamson and Roger L. Bagula, Oct 30 2006

Keywords

Comments

This entry is the result of merging two sequences, this one and a later submission by Philippe Deléham, Nov 29 2013 (with edits from Ralf Stephan, Dec 12 2013). Most of the present version is the work of Philippe Deléham, the only things remaining from the original entry are the sequence data and the Mathematica program. - N. J. A. Sloane, May 31 2014
Subtriangle of the triangle given by (0, 2, 1/2, 1/2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...) DELTA (1, -2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...) where DELTA is the operator defined in A084938.
Apart from signs, equals A126124.
Row sums = 1.
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(-x)^k = A001519(n+1), A079935(n+1), A004253(n+1), A001653(n+1), A049685(n), A070997(n), A070998(n), A072256(n+1), A078922(n+1), A077417(n), A085260(n+1), A001570(n+1) for x=0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 respectively.

Examples

			Triangle begins:
  1
  2, -1
  5, -5, 1
  13, -19, 8, -1
  34, -65, 42, -11, 1
  89, -210, 183, -74, 14, -1
  233, -654, 717, -394, 115, -17, 1
Triangle (0, 2, 1/2, 1/2, 0, 0, ...) DELTA (1, -2, 0, 0, ...) begins:
  1
  0, 1
  0, 2, -1
  0, 5, -5, 1
  0, 13, -19, 8, -1
  0, 34, -65, 42, -11, 1
  0, 89, -210, 183, -74, 14, -1
  0, 233, -654, 717, -394, 115, -17, 1
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Mathematica ( general k th center) Clear[M, T, d, a, x, k] k = 3 T[n_, m_, d_] := If[ n == m && n < d && m < d, k, If[n == m - 1 || n == m + 1, -1, If[n == m == d, k - 1, 0]]] M[d_] := Table[T[n, m, d], {n, 1, d}, {m, 1, d}] Table[M[d], {d, 1, 10}] Table[Det[M[d]], {d, 1, 10}] Table[Det[M[d] - x*IdentityMatrix[d]], {d, 1, 10}] a = Join[{M[1]}, Table[CoefficientList[ Det[M[d] - x*IdentityMatrix[d]], x], {d, 1, 10}]] Flatten[a] MatrixForm[a] Table[NSolve[Det[M[d] - x*IdentityMatrix[d]] == 0, x], {d, 1, 10}] Table[x /. NSolve[Det[M[d] - x*IdentityMatrix[d]] == 0, x][[d]], {d, 1, 10}]
  • PARI
    T(n,k)=polcoeff(polcoeff(Ser((1-x)/(1+(y-3)*x+x^2)),n,x),n-k,y) \\ Ralf Stephan, Dec 12 2013
    
  • Sage
    @CachedFunction
    def A123971(n,k): # With T(0,0) = 1!
        if n< 0: return 0
        if n==0: return 1 if k == 0 else 0
        h = 2*A123971(n-1,k) if n==1 else 3*A123971(n-1,k)
        return A123971(n-1,k-1) - A123971(n-2,k) - h
    for n in (0..9): [A123971(n,k) for k in (0..n)] # Peter Luschny, Nov 20 2012

Formula

T(n,k) = (-1)^n*A126124(n+1,k+1).
T(n,k) = (-1)^k*Sum_{m=k..n} binomial(m,k)*binomial(m+n,2*m). - Wadim Zudilin, Jan 11 2012
G.f.: (1-x)/(1+(y-3)*x+x^2).
T(n,0) = A001519(n+1) = A000045(2*n+1).
T(n+1,1) = -A001870(n).

Extensions

Edited by N. J. A. Sloane, May 31 2014

A180063 Pascal-like triangle with trigonometric properties, row sums = powers of 4; generated from shifted columns of triangle A180062.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 3, 1, 4, 11, 1, 7, 15, 41, 1, 8, 38, 56, 153, 1, 11, 46, 186, 209, 571, 1, 12, 81, 232, 859, 780, 2131, 1, 15, 93, 499, 1091, 3821, 2911, 7953, 1, 16, 140, 592, 2774, 4912, 16556, 10864, 29681, 1, 19, 156, 1044, 3366, 14418, 21468, 70356, 40545, 110771
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gary W. Adamson, Aug 08 2010

Keywords

Comments

Row sums = powers of 4, A000302: (1, 4, 16, 64, ...).
Rightmost terms of each row = A001835: (1, 3, 11, 41, 153, 571, ...).
A180063 may be considered N=4 in an infinite set of Pascal-like triangles generated from variants of the Cartan matrix. Such triangles have trigonometric properties in charpolys being the upward sloping diagonals (cf. triangle A180062 = upward sloping diagonals of A180063); as well as row sums = powers of 2,3,4,...
Triangle A125076 = N=3, with row sums powers of 3; (if the original Pascal's triangle A007318 is considered N=2). To generate the infinite set of these Pascal-like triangles we use Cartan matrix variants with (1's in the super and subdiagonals) and (N-1),N,N,N,... as the main diagonal, alternating with (N,N,N,...).
For example, in the current N=4 triangle, row 7 of A180062 relates to the Heptagon and is generated from the 3 X 3 matrix [3,1,0; 1,4,1; 0,1,4], charpoly x^3 - 11x^2 + 38x - 41. Thus row 7 of triangle A180062 = (1, 11, 38, 41) = an upward sloping diagonal of triangle A180063.
The upward sloping diagonals of the infinite set of Pascal-like triangles = denominators in continued fraction convergents to [1,N,1,N,1,N,...] such that Pascal's triangle (N=2, A007318) has the Fibonacci terms generated from [1,1,1,...]. Similarly, for the case (N=3, triangle A125076), the upward sloping diagonals = row terms of triangle A152063 and are denominators in convergents to [1,2,1,2,1,2,...] = (1, 3, 4, 11, 15, ...).
Triangle A180063 is generated from upward sloping diagonals of triangle A180062, sums found as denominators in [1,3,1,3,1,3,...] = (1, 4, 5, 19, ...).

Examples

			First few rows of the triangle:
  1;
  1,  3;
  1,  4,  11;
  1,  7,  15,   41;
  1,  8,  38,   56,  153;
  1, 11,  46,  186,  209,   571;
  1, 12,  81,  232,  859,   780,  2131;
  1, 15,  93,  499, 1091,  3821,  2911,  7953;
  1, 16, 140,  592, 2774,  4912, 16556, 10864, 29681;
  1, 19, 156, 1044, 3366, 14418, 21468, 70356, 40545, 110771;
  ...
		

Crossrefs

Formula

Given triangle A180062, shift columns upward so that the new triangle A180063 has (n+1) terms per row.
Showing 1-9 of 9 results.