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.

A245362 Semiprimes whose reversal + 1 is a square.

Original entry on oeis.org

51, 323, 341, 422, 591, 993, 998, 4227, 4265, 5129, 5534, 5921, 5937, 8049, 8657, 8801, 9953, 32133, 32282, 32471, 32597, 32817, 34091, 34379, 36611, 36863, 38937, 42011, 42243, 42605, 53211, 53673, 55745, 57167, 57903, 59543, 82151, 86354, 86781, 88217, 88433
Offset: 1

Views

Author

K. D. Bajpai, Jul 18 2014

Keywords

Comments

Semiprimes in A245361.
Similar sequence for primes at A167217.

Examples

			341 is in the sequence because 341 = 11 * 31, which is semiprime, and reversal(341) + 1 = 143 + 1 = 144 = 12^2.
591 is in the sequence because 591 = 3 * 197, which is semiprime, and reversal(591) + 1 = 195 + 1 = 196 = 14^2.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Select[Range[10^5], PrimeOmega[#] == 2 && IntegerQ[Sqrt[FromDigits[Reverse[IntegerDigits[#]]] + 1]] &]
  • PARI
    revint(n) = eval(concat(Vecrev(Str(n))))
    select(n->bigomega(n)==2 && issquare(revint(n)+1), vector(100000, n, n)) \\ Colin Barker, Jul 20 2014