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.

A295995 Numbers n such that there are precisely 15 groups of orders n and n + 1.

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%I A295995 #6 Dec 02 2017 20:50:54
%S A295995 1863,1971,4292,7624,8180,15140,17875,19524,20180,21020,23732,23751,
%T A295995 28371,30124,33032,33939,34532,35427,36620,40071,41444,42579,44739,
%U A295995 45128,45603,46052
%N A295995 Numbers n such that there are precisely 15 groups of orders n and n + 1.
%C A295995 Equivalently, lower member of consecutive terms of A294156.
%H A295995 H. U. Besche, B. Eick and E. A. O'Brien. <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0218196702001115">A Millennium Project: Constructing Small Groups</a>, Internat. J. Algebra and Computation, 12 (2002), 623-644.
%H A295995 Gordon Royle, <a href="http://staffhome.ecm.uwa.edu.au/~00013890/remote/cubcay/">Numbers of Small Groups</a>
%H A295995 <a href="/index/Gre#groups">Index entries for sequences related to groups</a>
%F A295995 Sequence is { n | A000001(n) = 15, A000001(n+1) = 15 }.
%e A295995 1863 is in the sequence because A000001(1863) = A000001(1864) = 15, 1971 is in the sequence because A000001(1971) = A000001(1972) = 15 and 19524 is in the sequence because A000001(19524) = A000001(19525) = 15.
%Y A295995 Cf. A000001, A294156.
%K A295995 nonn
%O A295995 1,1
%A A295995 _Muniru A Asiru_, Dec 02 2017