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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A346926 a(n) is the smallest positive integer whose square starts and ends with exactly n identical digits, and a(n) = 0 when there is no such integer.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 88, 10538, 235700, 0, 57735000, 0, 14907120000, 0, 235702260400000, 0, 7453559925000000, 0, 105409255338950000000, 0, 10540925533894600000000, 0, 14907119849998598000000000, 0, 74535599249992989880000000000, 0, 210818510677891955466600000000000, 0
Offset: 1

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Author

Bernard Schott, Aug 07 2021

Keywords

Comments

When a square ends in exactly three identical digits, these digits are necessarily 444 (A039685).
When a square ends with n > 3 identical digits, these last digits are necessarily 0's, and also this is only possible when n is even.
Differs from A174499 where only at least n identical digits are required.

Examples

			a(2) = 88 because 88^2 = 7744 starts with two 7's and ends with two 4's, and 88 is the smallest integer whose square starts and ends with exactly 2 identical digits.
a(4) = 235700 because 235700^2 = 55554490000 starts with four 5's and ends with four 0's, and 235700 is the smallest integer whose square starts and ends with exactly 4 identical digits.
		

Crossrefs

Formula

a(2*n+1) = 0 for n >= 2.
a(2*n) = A119511(2*n) * 10^n, for n >= 2.
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