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.
%I A185001 #36 Feb 08 2022 05:08:37 %S A185001 5,8,10,16,22,26,106,110,182,234,282,288,318,434,766,1056,1072,1462, %T A185001 1550,1930,3024,4330,5424,9398,10634,53094,90602,151632,384002,511638, %U A185001 530102,1364850,1887006,2193072,3138096,6470672,6959070 %N A185001 Numbers k with the property that their basins (as defined in A204539) are 2. %C A185001 This sequence follows on from A204540, which lists seven values of k for which basin(k) = 1. There are 37 known values of k for which basin(k) = 2. A search of numbers up to 10,000,000 has not uncovered any further integers with this property. The possibility that there are even larger numbers with basins equal to 2 cannot be completely ruled out, but the chances of one being discovered are remote, in view of the fact that the average basin size for large values of k is approximately k/3, that is, over 2000000 in the region where the last known such integer was discovered. %C A185001 For unknown reasons, all integers > 5 with basins equal to 1 or 2 are even. %H A185001 Mark Dukes, <a href="https://cs.uwaterloo.ca/journals/JIS/VOL24/Dukes/dukes3.html">Fagan's Construction, Strange Roots, and Tchoukaillon Solitaire</a>, Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 24 (2021), Article 21.7.1. %H A185001 Mark Dukes, <a href="https://arxiv.org/abs/2202.02381">Fagan's Construction, Strange Roots, and Tchoukaillon Solitaire</a>, arXiv:2202.02381 [math.NT], 2022. %Y A185001 Cf. A204539, A204540. %K A185001 nonn,more %O A185001 1,1 %A A185001 _Colm Fagan_, Jan 23 2012