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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A019434 Fermat primes: primes of the form 2^(2^k) + 1, for some k >= 0.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 5, 17, 257, 65537
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

Comments

It is conjectured that there are only 5 terms. Currently it has been shown that 2^(2^k) + 1 is composite for 5 <= k <= 32 (see Eric Weisstein's Fermat Primes link). - Dmitry Kamenetsky, Sep 28 2008
No Fermat prime is a Brazilian number. So Fermat primes belong to A220627. For proof see Proposition 3 page 36 in "Les nombres brésiliens" in Links. - Bernard Schott, Dec 29 2012
This sequence and A001220 are disjoint (see "Other theorems about Fermat numbers" in Wikipedia link). - Felix Fröhlich, Sep 07 2014
Numbers n > 1 such that n * 2^(n-2) divides (n-1)! + 2^(n-1). - Thomas Ordowski, Jan 15 2015
From Jaroslav Krizek, Mar 17 2016: (Start)
Primes p such that phi(p) = 2*phi(p-1); primes from A171271.
Primes p such that sigma(p-1) = 2p - 3.
Primes p such that sigma(p-1) = 2*sigma(p) - 5.
For n > 1, a(n) = primes p such that p = 4 * phi((p-1) / 2) + 1.
Subsequence of A256444 and A256439.
Conjectures:
1) primes p such that phi(p) = 2*phi(p-2).
2) primes p such that phi(p) = 2*phi(p-1) = 2*phi(p-2).
3) primes p such that p = sigma(phi(p-2)) + 2.
4) primes p such that phi(p-1) + 1 divides p + 1.
5) numbers n such that sigma(n-1) = 2*sigma(n) - 5. (End)
Odd primes p such that ratio of the form (the number of nonnegative m < p such that m^q == m (mod p))/(the number of nonnegative m < p such that -m^q == m (mod p)) is a divisor of p for all nonnegative q. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Oct 13 2020
Numbers n such that tau(n)*(number of distinct ratio (the number of nonnegative m < n such that m^q == m (mod n))/(the number of nonnegative m < n such that -m^q == m (mod n))) for nonnegative q is equal to 4. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Oct 22 2020
The numbers of primitive roots for the five known terms are 1, 2, 8, 128, 32768. - Gary W. Adamson, Jan 13 2022
Prime numbers such that every residue is either a primitive root or a quadratic residue. - Keith Backman, Jul 11 2022
If there are only 5 Fermat primes, then there are only 31 odd order groups which have a 2-group automorphism group. See the Miles Englezou link for a proof. - Miles Englezou, Mar 10 2025

References

  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 137-141, 197.
  • G. Everest, A. van der Poorten, I. Shparlinski and T. Ward, Recurrence Sequences, Amer. Math. Soc., 2003; see esp. p. 255.
  • C. F. Gauss, Disquisitiones Arithmeticae, Yale, 1965; see Table 1, p. 458.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §3.2 Prime Numbers, pp. 78-79.
  • Richard K. Guy, Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, A3.
  • Hardy and Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, bottom of page 18 in the sixth edition, gives an heuristic argument that this sequence is finite.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The Little Book of Bigger Primes, Springer-Verlag NY 2004. See pp. 7, 70.
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pages 136-137.

Crossrefs

Subsequence of A147545 and of A334101. Cf. also A333788, A334092.
Cf. A045544.

Programs

Formula

a(n+1) = A180024(A049084(a(n))). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 08 2010
a(n) = 1 + A001146(n-1), if 1 <= n <= 5. - Omar E. Pol, Jun 08 2018

A256439 Numbers k such that phi(k-1)+1 divides sigma(k).

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 5, 17, 26, 171, 257, 265, 1921, 9385, 26665, 65537, 263041, 437761, 1057801, 2038648321, 10866583226, 11453097097, 982923711145
Offset: 1

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Author

Jaroslav Krizek, Mar 29 2015

Keywords

Comments

Numbers k such that A000010(k-1)+1 divides A000203(k).
Supersequence of Fermat primes (A019434).
Supersequence of A256444. Corresponding values of numbers k(n) = sigma(n) / (phi(n-1)+1) : 2, 2, 2, 2, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, ... - Jaroslav Krizek, Mar 31 2015
a(19) > 10^13. - Giovanni Resta, Jul 13 2015

Examples

			17 is in the sequence because phi(16) + 1 divides sigma(17); 9 divides 18.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Magma
    [n: n in [2..1000000] | Denominator(SumOfDivisors(n) / (EulerPhi(n-1) + 1)) eq 1 ];
    
  • Maple
    with(numtheory): A256439:=n->`if`(sigma(n) mod (phi(n-1)+1) = 0, n, NULL): seq(A256439(n), n=2..10^5); # Wesley Ivan Hurt, Mar 29 2015
  • Mathematica
    Select[Range@ 1000000, Mod[DivisorSigma[1, #], EulerPhi[# - 1] + 1] == 0 &] (* Michael De Vlieger, Mar 29 2015 *)
  • PARI
    lista(nn) = {for (n=2, nn, if (sigma(n) % (eulerphi(n-1)+1) == 0, print1(n, ", ")););} \\ Michel Marcus, Mar 29 2015

Extensions

a(15)-a(18) from Giovanni Resta, Jul 13 2015
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