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.

A194351 Starting position of the first occurrence of a string of 2^n in the decimal expansion of Pi.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 6, 2, 11, 40, 15, 22, 148, 1750, 1842, 12735, 26862, 27372, 2943, 37619, 39587, 106920, 820238, 76875, 47887, 6150809, 3660438, 17376657, 15416321, 162454456, 132295965, 265234498, 33844308, 4847933000, 671531549, 1122335995, 2894348872, 763748417
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Kausthub Gudipati, Aug 22 2011

Keywords

Comments

a(46) > 50*10^12. - _Dmitry Petukhov, Oct 27 2021

Examples

			Pi = 3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197169399375105.. The '1' (2^0) after the decimal point is at position 1. The '1' of the first occurrence of '16' (2^4) is at position 40.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    d = ToString[N[Pi-3, 1000000]]; Table[pos = StringPosition[d, ToString[2^n], 1]; If[pos == {}, Print["not enough digits for ", 2^n]; pos = 0, pos = pos[[1, 1]] - 2], {n, 0, 19}] (* T. D. Noe, Sep 02 2011 *)

Formula

a(n) = A032445(2^n)-1. - R. J. Mathar, Sep 02 2011

Extensions

Terms corrected by D. S. McNeil, Sep 02 2011
a(29), a(32) from D. S. McNeil, Sep 03 2011
Edited by Hans Havermann, Jul 22 2014
a(28), a(30)-a(31) from Hans Havermann, Jul 22 2014
a(33)-a(43), a(45) from Dmitry Petukhov, Jan 27 2020
a(44) from Dmitry Petukhov, Oct 27 2021