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.

Showing 1-6 of 6 results.

A318835 Restricted growth sequence transform of A318834, product_{d|n, dA019565(A000010(d)).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 2, 3, 2, 4, 2, 4, 5, 6, 2, 7, 2, 8, 9, 8, 2, 10, 2, 11, 12, 13, 2, 14, 15, 16, 12, 14, 2, 17, 2, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 2, 23, 24, 25, 2, 26, 2, 27, 28, 29, 2, 30, 9, 31, 32, 33, 2, 34, 24, 35, 36, 37, 2, 38, 2, 39, 40, 39, 41, 42, 2, 43, 44, 45, 2, 46, 2, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 2, 52, 53, 54, 2, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 2, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 2
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Sep 04 2018

Keywords

Comments

For all i, j: a(i) = a(j) => A051953(i) = A051953(j).

Crossrefs

Programs

  • PARI
    up_to = 65537;
    rgs_transform(invec) = { my(om = Map(), outvec = vector(length(invec)), u=1); for(i=1, length(invec), if(mapisdefined(om,invec[i]), my(pp = mapget(om, invec[i])); outvec[i] = outvec[pp] , mapput(om,invec[i],i); outvec[i] = u; u++ )); outvec; };
    A019565(n) = {my(j,v); factorback(Mat(vector(if(n, #n=vecextract(binary(n), "-1..1")), j, [prime(j), n[j]])~))}; \\ From A019565
    A318834(n) = { my(m=1); fordiv(n,d,if(d < n,m *= A019565(eulerphi(d)))); m; };
    v318835 = rgs_transform(vector(up_to,n,A318834(n)));
    A318835(n) = v318835[n];

A051953 Cototient(n) := n - phi(n).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 4, 3, 6, 1, 8, 1, 8, 7, 8, 1, 12, 1, 12, 9, 12, 1, 16, 5, 14, 9, 16, 1, 22, 1, 16, 13, 18, 11, 24, 1, 20, 15, 24, 1, 30, 1, 24, 21, 24, 1, 32, 7, 30, 19, 28, 1, 36, 15, 32, 21, 30, 1, 44, 1, 32, 27, 32, 17, 46, 1, 36, 25, 46, 1, 48, 1, 38, 35, 40, 17, 54, 1, 48, 27
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Labos Elemer, Dec 21 1999

Keywords

Comments

Unlike totients, cototient(n+1) = cototient(n) never holds -- except 2-phi(2) = 3 - phi(3) = 1 -- because cototient(n) is congruent to n modulo 2. - Labos Elemer, Aug 08 2001
Theorem (L. Redei): b^a(n) == b^n (mod n) for every integer b. - Thomas Ordowski and Robert Israel, Mar 11 2016
Let S be the sum of the cototients of the divisors of n (A001065). S < n iff n is deficient, S = n iff n is perfect, and S > n iff n is abundant. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Oct 06 2023

Examples

			n = 12, phi(12) = 4 = |{1, 5, 7, 11}|, a(12) = 12 - phi(12) = 8, numbers not exceeding 12 and not coprime to 12: {2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12}.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A000010, A001065 (inverse Möbius transform), A005278, A001274, A083254, A098006, A049586, A051612, A053579, A054525, A062790 (Möbius transform), A063985 (partial sums), A063986, A290087.
Records: A065385, A065386.
Number of zeros in the n-th row of triangle A054521. - Omar E. Pol, May 13 2016
Cf. A063740 (number of k such that cototient(k) = n). - M. F. Hasler, Jan 11 2018

Programs

  • Haskell
    a051953 n = n - a000010 n  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 21 2014
    
  • Maple
    with(numtheory); A051953 := n->n-phi(n);
  • Mathematica
    Table[n - EulerPhi[n], {n, 1, 80}] (* Carl Najafi, Aug 16 2011 *)
  • PARI
    A051953(n) = n - eulerphi(n); \\ Michael B. Porter, Jan 28 2010
    
  • Python
    from sympy.ntheory import totient
    print([i - totient(i) for i in range(1, 101)]) # Indranil Ghosh, Mar 17 2017

Formula

a(n) = n - A000010(n).
Equals Mobius transform (A054525) of A001065. - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 11 2008
a(A006881(n)) = sopf(A006881(n)) - 1; a(A000040(n)) = 1. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, May 18 2013
G.f.: sum(n>=1, A000010(n)*x^(2*n)/(1-x^n) ). - Mircea Merca, Feb 23 2014
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Apr 13 2017: (Start)
G.f.: -Sum_{k>=2} mu(k)*x^k/(1 - x^k)^2.
Dirichlet g.f.: zeta(s-1)*(1 - 1/zeta(s)). (End)
From Antti Karttunen, Sep 05 2018 & Apr 29 2022: (Start)
Dirichlet convolution square of A317846/A046644 gives this sequence + A063524.
a(n) = A003557(n) * A318305(n).
a(n) = A000010(n) - A083254(n).
a(n) = A318325(n) - A318326(n).
a(n) = Sum_{d|n} A062790(d) = Sum_{d|n, dA007431(d)*(A000005(n/d)-1).
a(n) = A048675(A318834(n)) = A276085(A353564(n)). [These follow from the formula below]
a(n) = Sum_{d|n, dA000010(d).
a(n) = A051612(n) - A001065(n).
(End)

A048675 If n = p_i^e_i * ... * p_k^e_k, p_i < ... < p_k primes (with p_i = prime(i)), then a(n) = (1/2) * (e_i * 2^i + ... + e_k * 2^k).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 2, 4, 3, 8, 3, 4, 5, 16, 4, 32, 9, 6, 4, 64, 5, 128, 6, 10, 17, 256, 5, 8, 33, 6, 10, 512, 7, 1024, 5, 18, 65, 12, 6, 2048, 129, 34, 7, 4096, 11, 8192, 18, 8, 257, 16384, 6, 16, 9, 66, 34, 32768, 7, 20, 11, 130, 513, 65536, 8, 131072, 1025, 12, 6, 36, 19
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Jul 14 1999

Keywords

Comments

The original motivation for this sequence was to encode the prime factorization of n in the binary representation of a(n), each such representation being unique as long as this map is restricted to A005117 (squarefree numbers, resulting a permutation of nonnegative integers A048672) or any of its subsequence, resulting an injective function like A048623 and A048639.
However, also the restriction to A260443 (not all terms of which are squarefree) results a permutation of nonnegative integers, namely A001477, the identity permutation.
When a polynomial with nonnegative integer coefficients is encoded with the prime factorization of n (e.g., as in A206296, A260443), then a(n) gives the evaluation of that polynomial at x=2.
The primitive completely additive integer sequence that satisfies a(n) = a(A225546(n)), n >= 1. By primitive, we mean that if b is another such sequence, then there is an integer k such that b(n) = k * a(n) for all n >= 1. - Peter Munn, Feb 03 2020
If the binary rank of an integer partition y is given by Sum_i 2^(y_i-1), and the Heinz number is Product_i prime(y_i), then a(n) is the binary rank of the integer partition with Heinz number n. Note the function taking a set s to Sum_i 2^(s_i-1) is the inverse of A048793 (binary indices), and the function taking a multiset m to Product_i prime(m_i) is the inverse of A112798 (prime indices). - Gus Wiseman, May 22 2024

Examples

			From _Gus Wiseman_, May 22 2024: (Start)
The A018819(7) = 6 cases of binary rank 7 are the following, together with their prime indices:
   30: {1,2,3}
   40: {1,1,1,3}
   54: {1,2,2,2}
   72: {1,1,1,2,2}
   96: {1,1,1,1,1,2}
  128: {1,1,1,1,1,1,1}
(End)
		

Crossrefs

Row 2 of A104244.
Similar logarithmic functions: A001414, A056239, A090880, A289506, A293447.
Left inverse of the following sequences: A000079, A019565, A038754, A068911, A134683, A260443, A332824.
A003961, A028234, A032742, A055396, A064989, A067029, A225546, A297845 are used to express relationship between terms of this sequence.
Cf. also A048623, A048676, A099884, A277896 and tables A277905, A285325.
Cf. A297108 (Möbius transform), A332813 and A332823 [= a(n) mod 3].
Pairs of sequences (f,g) that satisfy a(f(n)) = g(n), possibly with offset change: (A000203,A331750), (A005940,A087808), (A007913,A248663), (A007947,A087207), (A097248,A048675), (A206296,A000129), (A248692,A056239), (A283477,A005187), (A284003,A006068), (A285101,A028362), (A285102,A068052), (A293214,A001065), (A318834,A051953), (A319991,A293897), (A319992,A293898), (A320017,A318674), (A329352,A069359), (A332461,A156552), (A332462,A156552), (A332825,A000010) and apparently (A163511,A135529).
See comments/formulas in A277333, A331591, A331740 giving their relationship to this sequence.
The formula section details how the sequence maps the terms of A329050, A329332.
A277892, A322812, A322869, A324573, A324575 give properties of the n-th term of this sequence.
The term k appears A018819(k) times.
The inverse transformation is A019565 (Heinz number of binary indices).
The version for distinct prime indices is A087207.
Numbers k such that a(k) is prime are A277319, counts A372688.
Grouping by image gives A277905.
A014499 lists binary indices of prime numbers.
A061395 gives greatest prime index, least A055396.
A112798 lists prime indices, length A001222, reverse A296150, sum A056239.
Binary indices:
- listed A048793, sum A029931
- reversed A272020
- opposite A371572, sum A230877
- length A000120, complement A023416
- min A001511, opposite A000012
- max A070939, opposite A070940
- complement A368494, sum A359400
- opposite complement A371571, sum A359359

Programs

  • Maple
    nthprime := proc(n) local i; if(isprime(n)) then for i from 1 to 1000000 do if(ithprime(i) = n) then RETURN(i); fi; od; else RETURN(0); fi; end; # nthprime(2) = 1, nthprime(3) = 2, nthprime(5) = 3, etc. - this is also A049084.
    A048675 := proc(n) local s,d; s := 0; for d in ifactors(n)[ 2 ] do s := s + d[ 2 ]*(2^(nthprime(d[ 1 ])-1)); od; RETURN(s); end;
    # simpler alternative
    f:= n -> add(2^(numtheory:-pi(t[1])-1)*t[2], t=ifactors(n)[2]):
    map(f, [$1..100]); # Robert Israel, Oct 10 2016
  • Mathematica
    a[1] = 0; a[n_] := Total[ #[[2]]*2^(PrimePi[#[[1]]]-1)& /@ FactorInteger[n] ]; Array[a, 100] (* Jean-François Alcover, Mar 15 2016 *)
  • PARI
    a(n) = my(f = factor(n)); sum(k=1, #f~, f[k,2]*2^primepi(f[k,1]))/2; \\ Michel Marcus, Oct 10 2016
    
  • PARI
    \\ The following program reconstructs terms (e.g. for checking purposes) from the factorization file prepared by Hans Havermann:
    v048675sigs = readvec("a048675.txt");
    A048675(n) = if(n<=2,n-1,my(prsig=v048675sigs[n],ps=prsig[1],es=prsig[2]); prod(i=1,#ps,ps[i]^es[i])); \\ Antti Karttunen, Feb 02 2020
    
  • Python
    from sympy import factorint, primepi
    def a(n):
        if n==1: return 0
        f=factorint(n)
        return sum([f[i]*2**(primepi(i) - 1) for i in f])
    print([a(n) for n in range(1, 51)]) # Indranil Ghosh, Jun 19 2017

Formula

a(1) = 0, a(n) = 1/2 * (e1*2^i1 + e2*2^i2 + ... + ez*2^iz) if n = p_{i1}^e1*p_{i2}^e2*...*p_{iz}^ez, where p_i is the i-th prime. (e.g. p_1 = 2, p_2 = 3).
Totally additive with a(p^e) = e * 2^(PrimePi(p)-1), where PrimePi(n) = A000720(n). [Missing factor e added to the comment by Antti Karttunen, Jul 29 2015]
From Antti Karttunen, Jul 29 2015: (Start)
a(1) = 0; for n > 1, a(n) = 2^(A055396(n)-1) + a(A032742(n)). [Where A055396(n) gives the index of the smallest prime dividing n and A032742(n) gives the largest proper divisor of n.]
a(1) = 0; for n > 1, a(n) = (A067029(n) * (2^(A055396(n)-1))) + a(A028234(n)).
Other identities. For all n >= 0:
a(A019565(n)) = n.
a(A260443(n)) = n.
a(A206296(n)) = A000129(n).
a(A005940(n+1)) = A087808(n).
a(A007913(n)) = A248663(n).
a(A007947(n)) = A087207(n).
a(A283477(n)) = A005187(n).
a(A284003(n)) = A006068(n).
a(A285101(n)) = A028362(1+n).
a(A285102(n)) = A068052(n).
Also, it seems that a(A163511(n)) = A135529(n) for n >= 1. (End)
a(1) = 0, a(2n) = 1+a(n), a(2n+1) = 2*a(A064989(2n+1)). - Antti Karttunen, Oct 11 2016
From Peter Munn, Jan 31 2020: (Start)
a(n^2) = a(A003961(n)) = 2 * a(n).
a(A297845(n,k)) = a(n) * a(k).
a(n) = a(A225546(n)).
a(A329332(n,k)) = n * k.
a(A329050(n,k)) = 2^(n+k).
(End)
From Antti Karttunen, Feb 02-25 2020, Feb 01 2021: (Start)
a(n) = Sum_{d|n} A297108(d) = Sum_{d|A225546(n)} A297108(d).
a(n) = a(A097248(n)).
For n >= 2:
A001221(a(n)) = A322812(n), A001222(a(n)) = A277892(n).
A000203(a(n)) = A324573(n), A033879(a(n)) = A324575(n).
For n >= 1, A331750(n) = a(A000203(n)).
For n >= 1, the following chains hold:
A293447(n) >= a(n) >= A331740(n) >= A331591(n).
a(n) >= A087207(n) >= A248663(n).
(End)
a(n) = A087207(A097248(n)). - Flávio V. Fernandes, Jul 16 2025

Extensions

Entry revised by Antti Karttunen, Jul 29 2015
More linking formulas added by Antti Karttunen, Apr 18 2017

A332824 a(n) = Product_{d|n} A019565(phi(d)), where phi is Euler totient function A000010.

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 4, 6, 12, 10, 36, 30, 60, 90, 100, 42, 540, 70, 900, 210, 420, 22, 8100, 66, 2100, 3150, 1764, 330, 18900, 550, 4900, 2970, 94500, 770, 44100, 2310, 4620, 6930, 484, 11550, 4252500, 130, 4356, 16170, 115500, 182, 9922500, 546, 291060, 242550, 108900, 2730, 1455300, 8190, 302500, 858, 1131900, 1430, 8820900, 19110
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Feb 25 2020

Keywords

Crossrefs

Cf. A048675 (a left inverse).

Programs

  • PARI
    A019565(n) = {my(j,v); factorback(Mat(vector(if(n, #n=vecextract(binary(n), "-1..1")), j, [prime(j), n[j]])~))}; \\ From A019565
    A332824(n) = { my(m=1); fordiv(n,d,m *= A019565(eulerphi(d))); (m); };

Formula

a(n) = Product_{d|n} A332825(d).
a(n) = A318834(n) * A332825(n).
A048675(a(n)) = n.
A097248(a(n)) = A019565(n).

A353564 Product_{d|n, dA276086(phi(d)), where A276086 is primorial base exp-function, and phi is Euler totient function.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 2, 4, 2, 12, 2, 12, 6, 36, 2, 108, 2, 20, 54, 108, 2, 180, 2, 972, 30, 180, 2, 8748, 18, 100, 30, 300, 2, 43740, 2, 1620, 270, 900, 90, 24300, 2, 500, 150, 131220, 2, 22500, 2, 24300, 4050, 4500, 2, 1968300, 10, 121500, 1350, 7500, 2, 112500, 810, 67500, 750, 22500, 2, 265720500, 2, 28, 3750, 364500, 450
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Apr 27 2022

Keywords

Crossrefs

Cf. A000010, A051953, A276085, A276086, A353563, A353565 (rgs-transform).
Cf. also A318834.

Programs

  • PARI
    A276086(n) = { my(m=1, p=2); while(n, m *= (p^(n%p)); n = n\p; p = nextprime(1+p)); (m); };
    A353564(n) = { my(m=1); fordiv(n,d,if(d < n,m *= A276086(eulerphi(d)))); m; };

Formula

a(1) = 1 (as an empty product).
a(n) = Product_{d|n, dA353563(d).
For all n >= 1, A276085(a(n)) = A051953(n).

A332825 a(n) = A019565(phi(n)).

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 2, 3, 3, 5, 3, 15, 5, 15, 5, 21, 5, 35, 15, 7, 7, 11, 15, 33, 7, 35, 21, 165, 7, 55, 35, 33, 35, 385, 7, 1155, 11, 55, 11, 77, 35, 65, 33, 77, 11, 91, 35, 273, 55, 77, 165, 1365, 11, 273, 55, 13, 77, 715, 33, 91, 77, 65, 385, 3003, 11, 5005, 1155, 65, 13, 143, 55, 51, 13, 455, 77, 255, 77, 119, 65, 91, 65, 5005, 77
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Feb 25 2020

Keywords

Crossrefs

Programs

  • PARI
    A019565(n) = {my(j,v); factorback(Mat(vector(if(n, #n=vecextract(binary(n), "-1..1")), j, [prime(j), n[j]])~))}; \\ From A019565
    A332825(n) = A019565(eulerphi(n));

Formula

a(n) = A019565(A000010(n)).
a(n) = A332824(n) / A318834(n)
a(4n) = A003961(a(2n)), a(4n+2) = a(2n+1).
Showing 1-6 of 6 results.