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.

A185095 Rectangular array read by antidiagonals: row q has generating function F_q(x) = sum_{r=0,...,q-1} ((q-r)*(-1)^r*binomial(2*q-r,r)*x^r) / sum_{s=0,...,q} ((-1)^s*binomial(2*q-s,s)*x^s), where q=1,2,....

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 1, 3, 3, 1, 4, 5, 7, 1, 5, 7, 13, 18, 1, 6, 9, 19, 38, 47, 1, 7, 11, 25, 58, 117, 123, 1, 8, 13, 31, 78, 187, 370, 322, 1, 9, 15, 37, 98, 257, 622, 1186, 843, 1, 10, 17, 43, 118, 327, 874, 2110, 3827, 2207, 1, 11, 19, 49, 138, 397, 1126, 3034, 7252, 12389, 5778, 1
Offset: 0

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Author

L. Edson Jeffery, Jan 23 2012

Keywords

Comments

Row indices q begin with 1, column indices n begin with 0.

Examples

			Array begins as
1,  1,  1,  1,   1,    1, ...
2,  3,  7, 18,  47,  123, ...
3,  5, 13, 38, 117,  370, ...
4,  7, 19, 58, 187,  622, ...
5,  9, 25, 78, 257,  874, ...
6, 11, 31, 98, 327, 1126, ...
...
		

Crossrefs

Conjecture. Transpose of array A186740.
Conjecture. Rows 0,1,2 (up to an offset) are A000012, A005248, A198636 (proved, see the Barbero, et al., reference there).
Conjecture. Columns 0,1,2,3,4 (up to an offset) are A000027, A005408, A016921, A114698, A114646.
Cf. A209235.

Formula

Conjecture. The n-th entry in row q is given by R_q(n) = 2^(2*n)*(sum_{j=1,...,n+1} (cos(j*Pi/(2*q+1)))^(2*n)), q >= 1, n >= 0.
Conjecture. G.f. for column n is of the form G_n(x) = H_n(x)/(1-x)^2, where H_n(x) is a polynomial in x, n >= 0.
Conjecture. 2*A185095(q,n) = A198632(2*q,n), q >= 1, n >= 0. - L. Edson Jeffery, Nov 23 2013