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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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A003415 a(n) = n' = arithmetic derivative of n: a(0) = a(1) = 0, a(prime) = 1, a(m*n) = m*a(n) + n*a(m).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 1, 4, 1, 5, 1, 12, 6, 7, 1, 16, 1, 9, 8, 32, 1, 21, 1, 24, 10, 13, 1, 44, 10, 15, 27, 32, 1, 31, 1, 80, 14, 19, 12, 60, 1, 21, 16, 68, 1, 41, 1, 48, 39, 25, 1, 112, 14, 45, 20, 56, 1, 81, 16, 92, 22, 31, 1, 92, 1, 33, 51, 192, 18, 61, 1, 72, 26, 59, 1, 156, 1, 39, 55, 80, 18, 71
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Can be extended to negative numbers by defining a(-n) = -a(n).
Based on the product rule for differentiation of functions: for functions f(x) and g(x), (fg)' = f'g + fg'. So with numbers, (ab)' = a'b + ab'. This implies 1' = 0. - Kerry Mitchell, Mar 18 2004
The derivative of a number x with respect to a prime number p as being the number "dx/dp" = (x-x^p)/p, which is an integer due to Fermat's little theorem. - Alexandru Buium, Mar 18 2004
The relation (ab)' = a'b + ab' implies 1' = 0, but it does not imply p' = 1 for p a prime. In fact, any function f defined on the primes can be extended uniquely to a function on the integers satisfying this relation: f(Product_i p_i^e_i) = (Product_i p_i^e_i) * (Sum_i e_i*f(p_i)/p_i). - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Nov 07 2006
See A131116 and A131117 for record values and where they occur. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jun 17 2007
Let n be the product of a multiset P of k primes. Consider the k-dimensional box whose edges are the elements of P. Then the (k-1)-dimensional surface of this box is 2*a(n). For example, 2*a(25) = 20, the perimeter of a 5 X 5 square. Similarly, 2*a(18) = 42, the surface area of a 2 X 3 X 3 box. - David W. Wilson, Mar 11 2011
The arithmetic derivative n' was introduced, probably for the first time, by the Spanish mathematician José Mingot Shelly in June 1911 with "Una cuestión de la teoría de los números", work presented at the "Tercer Congreso Nacional para el Progreso de las Ciencias, Granada", cf. link to the abstract on Zentralblatt MATH, and L. E. Dickson, History of the Theory of Numbers. - Giorgio Balzarotti, Oct 19 2013
a(A235991(n)) odd; a(A235992(n)) even. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 11 2014
Sequence A157037 lists numbers with prime arithmetic derivative, i.e., indices of primes in this sequence. - M. F. Hasler, Apr 07 2015
Maybe the simplest "natural extension" of the arithmetic derivative, in the spirit of the above remark by Franklin T. Adams-Watters (2006), is the "pi based" version where f(p) = primepi(p), see sequence A258851. When f is chosen to be the identity map (on primes), one gets A066959. - M. F. Hasler, Jul 13 2015
When n is composite, it appears that a(n) has lower bound 2*sqrt(n), with equality when n is the square of a prime, and a(n) has upper bound (n/2)*log_2(n), with equality when n is a power of 2. - Daniel Forgues, Jun 22 2016
If n = p1*p2*p3*... where p1, p2, p3, ... are all the prime factors of n (not necessarily distinct), and h is a real number (we assume h nonnegative and < 1), the arithmetic derivative of n is equivalent to n' = lim_{h->0} ((p1+h)*(p2+h)*(p3+h)*... - (p1*p2*p3*...))/h. It also follows that the arithmetic derivative of a prime is 1. We could assume h = 1/N, where N is an integer; then the limit becomes {N -> oo}. Note that n = 1 is not a prime and plays the role of constant. - Giorgio Balzarotti, May 01 2023

Examples

			6' = (2*3)' = 2'*3 + 2*3' = 1*3 + 2*1 = 5.
Note that, for example, 2' + 3' = 1 + 1 = 2, (2+3)' = 5' = 1. So ' is not linear.
G.f. = x^2 + x^3 + 4*x^4 + x^5 + 5*x^6 + x^7 + 12*x^8 + 6*x^9 + 7*x^10 + ...
		

References

  • G. Balzarotti, P. P. Lava, La derivata aritmetica, Editore U. Hoepli, Milano, 2013.
  • E. J. Barbeau, Problem, Canad. Math. Congress Notes, 5 (No. 8, April 1973), 6-7.
  • L. E. Dickson, History of the Theory of Numbers, Vol. 1, Chapter XIX, p. 451, Dover Edition, 2005. (Work originally published in 1919.)
  • A. M. Gleason et al., The William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition: Problems and Solutions 1938-1964, Math. Assoc. America, 1980, p. 295.
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

Cf. A086134 (least prime factor of n').
Cf. A086131 (greatest prime factor of n').
Cf. A068719 (derivative of 2n).
Cf. A068720 (derivative of n^2).
Cf. A068721 (derivative of n^3).
Cf. A001787 (derivative of 2^n).
Cf. A027471 (derivative of 3^(n-1)).
Cf. A085708 (derivative of 10^n).
Cf. A068327 (derivative of n^n).
Cf. A024451 (derivative of p#).
Cf. A068237 (numerator of derivative of 1/n).
Cf. A068238 (denominator of derivative of 1/n).
Cf. A068328 (derivative of squarefree numbers).
Cf. A068311 (derivative of n!).
Cf. A168386 (derivative of n!!).
Cf. A260619 (derivative of hyperfactorial(n)).
Cf. A260620 (derivative of superfactorial(n)).
Cf. A068312 (derivative of triangular numbers).
Cf. A068329 (derivative of Fibonacci(n)).
Cf. A096371 (derivative of partition number).
Cf. A099301 (derivative of d(n)).
Cf. A099310 (derivative of phi(n)).
Cf. A342925 (derivative of sigma(n)).
Cf. A349905 (derivative of prime shift).
Cf. A327860 (derivative of primorial base exp-function).
Cf. A369252 (derivative of products of three odd primes), A369251 (same sorted).
Cf. A068346 (second derivative of n).
Cf. A099306 (third derivative of n).
Cf. A258644 (fourth derivative of n).
Cf. A258645 (fifth derivative of n).
Cf. A258646 (sixth derivative of n).
Cf. A258647 (seventh derivative of n).
Cf. A258648 (eighth derivative of n).
Cf. A258649 (ninth derivative of n).
Cf. A258650 (tenth derivative of n).
Cf. A185232 (n-th derivative of n).
Cf. A258651 (A(n,k) = k-th arithmetic derivative of n).
Cf. A085731 (gcd(n,n')), A083345 (n'/gcd(n,n')), A057521 (gcd(n, (n')^k) for k>1).
Cf. A342014 (n' mod n), A369049 (n mod n').
Cf. A341998 (A003557(n')), A342001 (n'/A003557(n)).
Cf. A098699 (least x such that x' = n, antiderivative of n).
Cf. A098700 (n such that x' = n has no integer solution).
Cf. A099302 (number of solutions to x' = n).
Cf. A099303 (greatest x such that x' = n).
Cf. A051674 (n such that n' = n).
Cf. A083347 (n such that n' < n).
Cf. A083348 (n such that n' > n).
Cf. A099304 (least k such that (n+k)' = n' + k').
Cf. A099305 (number of solutions to (n+k)' = n' + k').
Cf. A328235 (least k > 0 such that (n+k)' = u * n' for some natural number u).
Cf. A328236 (least m > 1 such that (m*n)' = u * n' for some natural number u).
Cf. A099307 (least k such that the k-th arithmetic derivative of n is zero).
Cf. A099308 (k-th arithmetic derivative of n is zero for some k).
Cf. A099309 (k-th arithmetic derivative of n is nonzero for all k).
Cf. A129150 (n-th derivative of 2^3).
Cf. A129151 (n-th derivative of 3^4).
Cf. A129152 (n-th derivative of 5^6).
Cf. A189481 (x' = n has a unique solution).
Cf. A190121 (partial sums).
Cf. A258057 (first differences).
Cf. A229501 (n divides the n-th partial sum).
Cf. A165560 (parity).
Cf. A235991 (n' is odd), A235992 (n' is even).
Cf. A327863, A327864, A327865 (n' is a multiple of 3, 4, 5).
Cf. A157037 (n' is prime), A192192 (n'' is prime), A328239 (n''' is prime).
Cf. A328393 (n' is squarefree), A328234 (squarefree and > 1).
Cf. A328244 (n'' is squarefree), A328246 (n''' is squarefree).
Cf. A328303 (n' is not squarefree), A328252 (n' is squarefree, but n is not).
Cf. A328248 (least k such that the (k-1)-th derivative of n is squarefree).
Cf. A328251 (k-th arithmetic derivative is never squarefree for any k >= 0).
Cf. A256750 (least k such that the k-th derivative is either 0 or has a factor p^p).
Cf. A327928 (number of distinct primes p such that p^p divides n').
Cf. A342003 (max. exponent k for any prime power p^k that divides n').
Cf. A327929 (n' has at least one divisor of the form p^p).
Cf. A327978 (n' is primorial number > 1).
Cf. A328243 (n' is a partial sum of primorial numbers and larger than one).
Cf. A328310 (maximal prime exponent of n' minus maximal prime exponent of n).
Cf. A328320 (max. prime exponent of n' is less than that of n).
Cf. A328321 (max. prime exponent of n' is >= that of n).
Cf. A328383 (least k such that the k-th derivative of n is either a multiple or a divisor of n, but not both).
Cf. A263111 (the ordinal transform of a).
Cf. A300251, A319684 (Möbius and inverse Möbius transform).
Cf. A305809 (Dirichlet convolution square).
Cf. A349133, A349173, A349394, A349380, A349618, A349619, A349620, A349621 (for miscellaneous Dirichlet convolutions).
Cf. A069359 (similar formula which agrees on squarefree numbers).
Cf. A258851 (the pi-based arithmetic derivative of n).
Cf. A328768, A328769 (primorial-based arithmetic derivatives of n).
Cf. A328845, A328846 (Fibonacci-based arithmetic derivatives of n).
Cf. A302055, A327963, A327965, A328099 (for other variants and modifications).
Cf. A038554 (another sequence using "derivative" in its name, but involving binary expansion of n).
Cf. A322582, A348507 (lower and upper bounds), also A002620.

Programs

  • GAP
    A003415:= Concatenation([0,0],List(List([2..10^3],Factors),
    i->Product(i)*Sum(i,j->1/j))); # Muniru A Asiru, Aug 31 2017
    (APL, Dyalog dialect) A003415 ← { ⍺←(0 1 2) ⋄ ⍵≤1:⊃⍺ ⋄ 0=(3⊃⍺)|⍵:((⊃⍺+(2⊃⍺)×(⍵÷3⊃⍺)) ((2⊃⍺)×(3⊃⍺)) (3⊃⍺)) ∇ ⍵÷3⊃⍺ ⋄ ((⊃⍺) (2⊃⍺) (1+(3⊃⍺))) ∇ ⍵} ⍝ Antti Karttunen, Feb 18 2024
  • Haskell
    a003415 0 = 0
    a003415 n = ad n a000040_list where
      ad 1 _             = 0
      ad n ps'@(p:ps)
         | n < p * p     = 1
         | r > 0         = ad n ps
         | otherwise     = n' + p * ad n' ps' where
           (n',r) = divMod n p
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, May 09 2011
    
  • Magma
    Ad:=func; [n le 1 select 0 else Ad(n): n in [0..80]]; // Bruno Berselli, Oct 22 2013
    
  • Maple
    A003415 := proc(n) local B,m,i,t1,t2,t3; B := 1000000000039; if n<=1 then RETURN(0); fi; if isprime(n) then RETURN(1); fi; t1 := ifactor(B*n); m := nops(t1); t2 := 0; for i from 1 to m do t3 := op(i,t1); if nops(t3) = 1 then t2 := t2+1/op(t3); else t2 := t2+op(2,t3)/op(op(1,t3)); fi od: t2 := t2-1/B; n*t2; end;
    A003415 := proc(n)
            local a,f;
            a := 0 ;
            for f in ifactors(n)[2] do
                    a := a+ op(2,f)/op(1,f);
            end do;
            n*a ;
    end proc: # R. J. Mathar, Apr 05 2012
  • Mathematica
    a[ n_] := If[ Abs @ n < 2, 0, n Total[ #2 / #1 & @@@ FactorInteger[ Abs @ n]]]; (* Michael Somos, Apr 12 2011 *)
    dn[0] = 0; dn[1] = 0; dn[n_?Negative] := -dn[-n]; dn[n_] := Module[{f = Transpose[FactorInteger[n]]}, If[PrimeQ[n], 1, Total[n*f[[2]]/f[[1]]]]]; Table[dn[n], {n, 0, 100}] (* T. D. Noe, Sep 28 2012 *)
  • PARI
    A003415(n) = {local(fac);if(n<1,0,fac=factor(n);sum(i=1,matsize(fac)[1],n*fac[i,2]/fac[i,1]))} /* Michael B. Porter, Nov 25 2009 */
    
  • PARI
    apply( A003415(n)=vecsum([n/f[1]*f[2]|f<-factor(n+!n)~]), [0..99]) \\ M. F. Hasler, Sep 25 2013, updated Nov 27 2019
    
  • PARI
    A003415(n) = { my(s=0, m=1, spf); while(n>1, spf = A020639(n); n /= spf; s += m*n; m *= spf); (s); }; \\ Antti Karttunen, Mar 10 2021
    
  • PARI
    a(n) = my(f=factor(n), r=[1/(e+!e)|e<-f[,1]], c=f[,2]); n*r*c; \\ Ruud H.G. van Tol, Sep 03 2023
    
  • Python
    from sympy import factorint
    def A003415(n):
        return sum([int(n*e/p) for p,e in factorint(n).items()]) if n > 1 else 0
    # Chai Wah Wu, Aug 21 2014
    
  • Sage
    def A003415(n):
        F = [] if n == 0 else factor(n)
        return n * sum(g / f for f, g in F)
    [A003415(n) for n in range(79)] # Peter Luschny, Aug 23 2014
    

Formula

If n = Product p_i^e_i, a(n) = n * Sum (e_i/p_i).
a(m*p^p) = (m + a(m))*p^p, p prime: a(m*A051674(k))=A129283(m)*A051674(k). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 07 2007
For n > 1: a(n) = a(A032742(n)) * A020639(n) + A032742(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, May 09 2011
a(n) = n * Sum_{p|n} v_p(n)/p, where v_p(n) is the largest power of the prime p dividing n. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jul 12 2015
For n >= 2, Sum_{k=2..n} floor(1/a(k)) = pi(n) = A000720(n) (see K. T. Atanassov article). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Mar 22 2019
From A.H.M. Smeets, Jan 17 2020: (Start)
Limit_{n -> oo} (1/n^2)*Sum_{i=1..n} a(i) = A136141/2.
Limit_{n -> oo} (1/n)*Sum_{i=1..n} a(i)/i = A136141.
a(n) = n if and only if n = p^p, where p is a prime number. (End)
Dirichlet g.f.: zeta(s-1)*Sum_{p prime} 1/(p^s-p), see A136141 (s=2), A369632 (s=3) [Haukkanen, Merikoski and Tossavainen]. - Sebastian Karlsson, Nov 25 2021
From Antti Karttunen, Nov 25 2021: (Start)
a(n) = Sum_{d|n} d * A349394(n/d).
For all n >= 1, A322582(n) <= a(n) <= A348507(n).
If n is not a prime, then a(n) >= 2*sqrt(n), or in other words, for all k >= 1 for which A002620(n)+k is not a prime, we have a(A002620(n)+k) > n. [See Ufnarovski and Åhlander, Theorem 9, point (3).]
(End)

Extensions

More terms from Michel ten Voorde, Apr 11 2001

A327969 The length of a shortest path from n to zero when using the transitions x -> A003415(x) and x -> A276086(x), or -1 if no zero can ever be reached from n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 2, 5, 2, 3, 2, 6, 4, 3, 2, 5, 2, 5, 6, 6, 2, 5, 2, 7, 4, 3, 2
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Oct 07 2019

Keywords

Comments

The terms of this sequence are currently known only up to n=23, with the value of a(24) still being uncertain. For the tentative values of the later terms, see sequence A328324 which gives upper bounds for these terms, many of which are very likely also exact values for them.
As A051903(A003415(n)) >= A051903(n)-1, it means that it takes always at least A051903(n) steps to a prime if iterating solely with A003415.
Some known values and upper bounds from n=24 onward:
a(24) <= 11.
a(25) = 4.
a(26) = 7.
a(27) <= 22.
a(33) = 4.
a(39) = 4.
a(40) = 5.
a(42) = 3.
a(44) <= 10.
a(45) = 5.
a(46) = 5.
a(48) = 9.
a(49) = 6.
a(50) = 6.
a(55) = 7.
a(74) = 5.
a(77) = 6.
a(80) <= 18.
a(111) = 6.
a(112) = 8.
a(125) <= 9.
a(240) = 7.
a(625) <= 10.
a(875) = 8.
From Antti Karttunen, Feb 20 2022: (Start)
a(2556) <= 20.
a(5005) <= 19.
What is the value of a(128), and is A328324(128) well-defined?
When I created this sequence, I conjectured that by applying two simple arithmetic operations "arithmetic derivative" (A003415) and "primorial base exp-function" (A276086) in some combination, and starting from any positive integer, we could always reach zero (via a prime and 1).
At the first sight it seems almost certain that the conjecture holds, as it is always possible at every step to choose from two options (which very rarely meet, see A351088), leading to an exponentially growing search tree, and also because A276086 always jumps out of any dead-end path with p^p-factors (dead-end from the arithmetic derivative's point of view). However, it should be realized that one can reach the terms of either A157037 or A327978 with a single step of A003415 only from squarefree numbers (or respectively, cubefree numbers that are not multiples of 4, see A328234), and in general, because A003415 decreases the maximal exponent of the prime factorization (A051903) at most by one, if the maximal exponent in the prime factorization of n is large, there is a correspondingly long path to traverse if we take only A003415-steps in the iteration, and any step could always lead with certain probability to a p^p-number. Note that the antiderivatives of primorials with a square factor seem quite rare, see A351029.
And although taking a A276086-step will always land us to a p^p-free number (which a priori is not in the obvious dead-end path of A003415, although of course it might eventually lead to one), it (in most cases) also increases the magnitude of number considerably, that tends to make the escape even harder. Particularly, in the majority of cases A276086 increases the maximal exponent (which in the preimage is A328114, "maximal digit value used when n is written in primorial base"), so there will be even a longer journey down to squarefree numbers when using A003415. See the sequences A351067 and A351071 for the diminishing ratios suggesting rapidly diminishing chances of successfully reaching zero from larger terms of A276086. Also, the asymptotic density of A276156 is zero, even though A351073 may contain a few larger values.
On the other hand, if we could prove that by (for example) continuing upwards with any p^p-path of A003415 we could eventually reach with a near certainty a region of numbers with low values of A328114 (i.e., numbers with smallish digits in primorial base, like A276156), then the situation might change (see also A351089). However, a few empirical runs seemed to indicate otherwise.
For all of the above reasons, I now conjecture that there are natural numbers from which it is not possible to reach zero with any combination of steps. For example 128 or 5^5 = 3125.
(End)

Examples

			Let -A> stand for an application of A003415 and -B> for an application of A276086, then, we have for example:
a(8) = 6 as we have 8 -A>  12 -B>  25 -A> 10 -A>  7 -A> 1 -A> 0, six transitions in total (and there are no shorter paths).
a(15) = 6 as we have 15 -B> 150 -A> 185 -A> 42 -A> 41 -A> 1 -A> 0, six transitions in total (and there are no shorter paths).
a(20) = 7, as 20 -B> 375 -A> 350 -A> 365 -A> 78 -A> 71 -A> 1 -A> 0, and there are no shorter paths.
For n=112, we know that a(112) cannot be larger than eight, as A328099^(8)(112) = 0, so we have a path of length 8 as 112 -A> 240 -B> 77 -A> 18 -A> 21 -A> 10 -A> 7 -A> 1 -A> 0. Checking all 32 combinations of the paths of lengths of 5 starting from 112 shows that none of them or their prefixes ends with a prime, thus there cannot be any shorter path, and indeed a(112) = 8.
a(24) <= 11 as A328099^(11)(24) = 0, i.e., we have 24 -A> 44 -A> 48 -A> 112 -A> 240 -B> 77 -A> 18 -A> 21 -A> 10 -A> 7 -A> 1 -A> 0. On the other hand, 24 -B> 625 -B> 17794411250 -A> 41620434625 -A> 58507928150 -A> 86090357185 -A> 54113940517 -A> 19982203325 -A> 12038411230 -A> 8426887871 -A> 1 -A> 0, thus offering another path of length 11.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A328324 (a sequence giving upper bounds, computed with restricted search space).
Sequences for whose terms k, value a(k) has a guaranteed constant upper bound: A000040, A002110, A143293, A157037, A192192, A327978, A328232, A328233, A328239, A328240, A328243, A328249, A328313.
Sequences for whose terms k, it is guaranteed that a(k) has finite value > 0, even if not bound by a constant: A099308, A328116.

Programs

  • PARI
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    A276086(n) = { my(m=1, p=2); while(n, m *= (p^(n%p)); n = n\p; p = nextprime(1+p)); (m); };
    A327969(n,searchlim=0) = if(!n,n,my(xs=Set([n]),newxs,a,b,u); for(k=1,oo, print("n=", n, " k=", k, " xs=", xs); newxs=Set([]); for(i=1,#xs,u = xs[i]; a = A003415(u); if(0==a, return(k)); if(isprime(a), return(k+2)); b = A276086(u); if(isprime(b), return(k+1+(u>2))); newxs = setunion([a],newxs); if(!searchlim || (b<=searchlim),newxs = setunion([b],newxs))); xs = newxs));

Formula

a(0) = 0, a(p^p) = 1 + a(A276086(p^p)) for primes p, and for other numbers, a(n) = 1+min(a(A003415(n)), a(A276086(n))).
a(p) = 2 for all primes p.
For all n, a(n) <= A328324(n).
Let A stand the transition x -> A003415(x), and B stand for x -> A276086(x). The following sequences give some constant upper limits, because it is guaranteed that the combination given in brackets (the leftmost A or B is applied first) will always lead to a prime:
For all n, a(A157037(n)) = 3. [A]
For n > 1, a(A002110(n)) = 3. [B]
For all n, a(A192192(n)) <= 4. [AA]
For all n, a(A327978(n)) = 4. [AB]
For all n, a(A328233(n)) <= 4. [BA]
For all n, a(A143293(n)) <= 4. [BB]
For all n, a(A328239(n)) <= 5. [AAA]
For all n, a(A328240(n)) <= 5. [BAA]
For all n, a(A328243(n)) <= 5. [ABB]
For all n, a(A328313(n)) <= 5. [BBB]
For all n, a(A328249(n)) <= 6. [BAAA]
For all k in A046099, a(k) >= 4, and if A328114(k) > 1, then certainly a(k) > 4.

A157037 Numbers with prime arithmetic derivative A003415.

Original entry on oeis.org

6, 10, 22, 30, 34, 42, 58, 66, 70, 78, 82, 105, 114, 118, 130, 142, 154, 165, 174, 182, 202, 214, 222, 231, 238, 246, 255, 273, 274, 282, 285, 286, 298, 310, 318, 345, 357, 358, 366, 370, 382, 385, 390, 394, 399, 418, 430, 434, 442, 454, 455, 465, 474, 478
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 22 2009

Keywords

Comments

Equivalently, solutions to n'' = 1, since n' = 1 iff n is prime. Twice the lesser of the twin primes, 2*A001359 = A108605, are a subsequence. - M. F. Hasler, Apr 07 2015
All terms are squarefree, because if there would be a prime p whose square p^2 would divide n, then A003415(n) = (A003415(p^2) * (n/p^2)) + (p^2 * A003415(n/p^2)) = p*[(2 * (n/p^2)) + (p * A003415(n/p^2))], which certainly is not a prime. - Antti Karttunen, Oct 10 2019

Examples

			A003415(42) = A003415(2*3*7) = 2*3+3*7+7*2 = 41 = A000040(13), therefore 42 is a term.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A189441 (primes produced by these numbers), A241859.
Cf. A192192, A328239 (numbers whose 2nd and numbers whose 3rd arithmetic derivative is prime).
Cf. A108605, A256673 (subsequences).
Subsequence of following sequences: A005117, A099308, A235991, A328234 (A328393), A328244, A328321.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a157037 n = a157037_list !! (n-1)
    a157037_list = filter ((== 1) . a010051' . a003415) [1..]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 08 2015
    
  • Mathematica
    dn[0] = 0; dn[1] = 0; dn[n_?Negative] := -dn[-n]; dn[n_] := Module[{f = Transpose[FactorInteger[n]]}, If[PrimeQ[n], 1, Total[n*f[[2]]/f[[1]]]]]; Select[Range[500], dn[dn[#]] == 1 &] (* T. D. Noe, Mar 07 2013 *)
  • PARI
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    isA157037(n) = isprime(A003415(n)); \\ Antti Karttunen, Oct 19 2019
    
  • Python
    from itertools import count, islice
    from sympy import isprime, factorint
    def A157037_gen(): # generator of terms
        return filter(lambda n:isprime(sum(n*e//p for p,e in factorint(n).items())), count(2))
    A157037_list = list(islice(A157037_gen(),20)) # Chai Wah Wu, Jun 23 2022

Formula

A010051(A003415(a(n))) = 1; A068346(a(n)) = 1; A099306(a(n)) = 0.
A003415(a(n)) = A328385(a(n)) = A241859(n); A327969(a(n)) = 3. - Antti Karttunen, Oct 19 2019

A327978 Numbers whose arithmetic derivative (A003415) is a primorial number (A002110) > 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

9, 161, 209, 221, 2189, 2561, 3281, 3629, 5249, 5549, 6401, 7181, 7661, 8321, 8909, 9089, 9869, 10001, 10349, 10541, 10961, 11009, 11021, 29861, 38981, 52601, 66149, 84101, 93029, 97481, 132809, 150281, 158969, 163301, 197669, 214661, 227321, 235721, 285449, 321989, 338021, 357881, 369701, 381449, 385349, 416261, 420089, 442889
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Oct 09 2019

Keywords

Comments

Numbers n such that A327859(n) = A276086(A003415(n)) is an odd prime.
Composite terms in A328232.
Although it first might seem that the numbers whose arithmetic derivative is A002110(k) all appear before any of those whose arithmetic derivative is A002110(k+1), that is not true, as for example, we have a(56) = 570149, and A003415(570149) = 2310, a(57) = 570209, and A003415(570209) = 30030, but then a(58) = 573641 with A003415(573641) = 2310 again.
Because this is a subsequence of A327862 (all primorials > 1 are of the form 4k+2), only odd numbers are present.
Conjecture: No multiples of 5 occur in this sequence, and no multiples of 3 after the initial 9.
Of the first 10000 terms, all others are semiprimes (with 9 the only square one), except 1547371 = 7^2 * 23 * 1373 and 79332523 = 17^2 * 277 * 991, the latter being the only known term whose decimal expansion ends with 3. If all solutions were semiprimes p*q such that p+q = A002110(k) for some k > 1 (see A002375), it would be a sufficient reason for the above conjecture to hold. - David A. Corneth and Antti Karttunen, Oct 11 2019
In any case, the solutions have to be of the form "odd numbers with an even number of prime factors with multiplicity" (see A235992), and terms must also be cubefree (A004709), as otherwise the arithmetic derivative would not be squarefree.
Sequence A366890 gives the non-Goldbachian solutions, i.e., numbers that are not semiprimes. See also A368702. - Antti Karttunen, Jan 17 2024

Crossrefs

Cf. A351029 (number of k for which k' = A002110(n)).
Cf. A368703, A368704 (the least and the greatest k for which k' = A002110(n)).
Cf. A366890 (terms that are not semiprimes), A368702 (numbers k such that k' is one of the terms of this sequence).
Subsequence of following sequences: A004709, A189553, A327862, A328232, A328234.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    ad[n_] := n * Total @ (Last[#]/First[#] & /@ FactorInteger[n]); primQ[n_] := Max[(f = FactorInteger[n])[[;;,2]]] == 1 && PrimePi[f[[-1,1]]] == Length[f]; Select[Range[10^4], primQ[ad[#]] &] (* Amiram Eldar, Oct 11 2019 *)
  • PARI
    A002620(n) = ((n^2)>>2);
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    A276150(n) = { my(s=0, p=2, d); while(n, d = (n%p); s += d; n = (n-d)/p; p = nextprime(1+p)); (s); };
    isA327978flat(n) = { my(u=A003415(n)); ((u>1)&&(1==A276150(u))); }; \\ Slow!
    k=0; for(n=1,A002620(30030),if(isA327978flat(n), k++; write("b327978.txt", k, " ", n)));

Formula

A327969(a(n)) = 4 for all n.

A192192 Numbers whose second arithmetic derivative (A068346) is prime; Polynomial-like numbers of degree 3.

Original entry on oeis.org

9, 21, 25, 57, 85, 93, 121, 126, 145, 161, 185, 201, 206, 209, 221, 237, 242, 253, 265, 289, 305, 315, 326, 333, 341, 365, 369, 377, 381, 413, 417, 437, 453, 458, 490, 495, 497, 517, 537, 542, 545, 565, 566, 575, 578, 597, 605, 633, 637, 638, 649, 666, 685
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Vladimir Shevelev, Jun 25 2011

Keywords

Comments

The fourth A003415-iteration of a(n) is the first to be 0.

Crossrefs

Cf. A157037, A328239 (the first and third derivative is prime).
Subsequence of following sequences: A328234, A328244, A328246.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    dn[0] = 0; dn[1] = 0; dn[n_?Negative] := -dn[-n]; dn[n_] := Module[{f = Transpose[FactorInteger[n]]}, If[PrimeQ[n], 1, Total[n*f[[2]]/f[[1]]]]]; Select[Range[1000], dn[dn[dn[#]]] == 1&] (* T. D. Noe, Mar 07 2013 *)
  • PARI
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    isA192192(n) = isprime(A003415(A003415(n))); \\ Antti Karttunen, Oct 19 2019

Formula

For all n, A327969(a(n)) <= 4. - Antti Karttunen, Oct 19 2019

Extensions

More terms from Olivier Gérard, Jul 04 2011
New primary definition added to the name by Antti Karttunen, Oct 19 2019

A328393 Numbers whose arithmetic derivative (A003415) is a squarefree number (A005117).

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 25, 26, 29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 37, 38, 41, 42, 43, 45, 47, 49, 53, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62, 63, 66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 73, 74, 75, 78, 79, 82, 83, 85, 89, 90, 93, 97, 98, 101, 102, 103, 105, 106, 107, 109, 110, 113, 114, 117, 118, 121, 126, 127, 129, 130, 131, 133, 134, 137, 139, 142
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Oct 19 2019

Keywords

Crossrefs

Union of A000040 and A328234. Complement of A328303.
Cf. A328252 (nonsquarefree terms), A157037, A192192, A327978 (other subsequences).

Programs

  • PARI
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    isA328393(n) = issquarefree(A003415(n));

A328244 Numbers whose second arithmetic derivative (A068346) is a squarefree number (A005117).

Original entry on oeis.org

6, 9, 10, 14, 18, 21, 22, 25, 30, 34, 38, 42, 46, 50, 57, 58, 62, 65, 66, 69, 70, 77, 78, 82, 85, 86, 93, 94, 99, 105, 114, 118, 121, 122, 125, 126, 130, 133, 134, 138, 142, 145, 146, 150, 154, 161, 165, 166, 169, 170, 174, 177, 182, 185, 186, 198, 201, 202, 206, 207, 209, 213, 214, 217, 221, 222, 230, 231, 237, 238, 242, 246, 253, 254, 255
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Oct 11 2019

Keywords

Comments

Numbers n for which A008966(A003415(A003415(n))) = 1.
Numbers whose first, second or third arithmetic is prime (A157037, A192192, A328239) are all included in this sequence, because: (1) taking arithmetic derivative of a prime gives 1, which is squarefree, (2) primes themselves are squarefree, and (3) only squarefree numbers may have arithmetic derivative that is a prime.

Examples

			For n=6, its first arithmetic derivative is A003415(6) = 5, and its second derivative is A003415(5) = 1, and 1 is a squarefree number (in A005117), thus 6 is included in this sequence.
For n=9, A003415(9) = 6, A003415(6) = 5, and 5, like all prime numbers, is squarefree, thus 9 is included in this sequence.
For n=14, A003415(14) = 9, A003415(9) = 6 = 2*3, and as 6 is squarefree, 14 is included in this sequence.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • PARI
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    isA328244(n) = { my(u=A003415(A003415(n))); (u>0 && issquarefree(u)); };

A366890 Irregular triangle, wherein row n lists in ascending order all numbers k whose arithmetic derivative k' is equal to the n-th primorial, A002110(n), and that have more than two prime factors with multiplicity. Rows of length zero are simply omitted, i.e., when A369000(n) = 0.

Original entry on oeis.org

1547371, 79332523, 1102527599503, 25336943536819, 25962012375103, 25970380120783, 66702554987143, 526285951027003, 927949814519899, 7777707036642079, 9584173681667203, 13082430772438171, 22101822021783739, 4958985803436403, 32006922970429003, 32076018550175863, 49806227168831659, 84682266449971639, 97995266657958403
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Jan 09 2024

Keywords

Comments

For n > 0, numbers k such that A003415(k) = A002110(n) and A001222(k) > 2.
Sequence as a whole is not listed in ascending order, even though each batch of solutions for each n for which A369000(n) > 0 are. For example, we have a(14) < a(13) because A003415(22101822021783739) = A002110(12), while A003415(4958985803436403) = A002110(13). See the examples.
Question: Are there any common terms with A036785, that is, with A368697?

Examples

			For rows n=1..6, 9 & 10 nothing is listed, as those rows are empty.
Row for n=7 has just one term: 1547371 (= 7^2 * 23 * 1373). Note that A003415(1547371) = 510510 = A002110(7).
Row for n=8 has just one term: 79332523 (= 17^2 * 277 * 991).
Row for n=11 has two terms:
  1102527599503 (= 11^2 * 11071 * 823033),
  25336943536819 (= 157 * 743 * 5749 * 37781).
Row for n=12 has nine terms:
  25962012375103 (= 7^2 * 8597 * 61630451),
  25970380120783 (= 7^2 * 41387 * 12806141),
  66702554987143 (= 19^2 * 167 * 1106416889),
  526285951027003 (= 73 * 3919 * 7013 * 262313),
  927949814519899 (= 269 * 271 * 1697 * 7501033),
  7777707036642079 (= 2203 * 2791 * 7349 * 172127),
  9584173681667203 (= 2131 * 5953 * 7901 * 95621),
  13082430772438171 (= 3109 * 5861 * 24421 * 29399),
  22101822021783739 (= 8783 * 11777 * 13921 * 15349).
Row for n=13 has 18 terms, and begins with:
  4958985803436403 (= 37^2 * 137 * 26440450451),
and ends with:
  3206697143570677543 (= 36899 * 41983 * 45233 * 45763).
Note that A003415(3206697143570677543) = 304250263527210 = A002110(13).
		

Crossrefs

When the whole sequence is sorted into ascending order, equal to A327978 without any semiprime solutions (solutions in A001358), and also a subsequence of following sequences: A004709, A327862, A328234.

Programs

  • PARI
    \\ See the attached PARI-program

A328252 Numbers that are not squarefree, but whose arithmetic derivative (A003415) is.

Original entry on oeis.org

9, 18, 25, 45, 49, 63, 75, 90, 98, 117, 121, 126, 147, 150, 153, 169, 171, 175, 198, 234, 242, 245, 261, 279, 289, 294, 315, 325, 333, 338, 342, 350, 361, 363, 369, 387, 414, 423, 425, 450, 475, 477, 490, 495, 507, 522, 529, 539, 550, 558, 575, 578, 603, 605, 630, 637, 639, 650, 657, 666, 711, 722, 726, 735, 738, 774, 775, 801
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Oct 11 2019

Keywords

Examples

			18 = 2 * 3^2 is not squarefree, but its arithmetic derivative A003415(18) = 21 = 3*7 is, thus 18 is included in this sequence.
		

Crossrefs

Row 3 of array A328250. Positions of 2's in A328248.
Setwise difference A328234 \ A005117. Intersection of A013929 and A328234.

Programs

  • PARI
    A003415(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n)); n*sum(i=1, #f~, f[i, 2]/f[i, 1]));
    isA328252(n) = (!issquarefree(n) && issquarefree(A003415(n)));
    
  • PARI
    A003415checked(n) = if(n<=1, 0, my(f=factor(n), s=0); for(i=1, #f~, if(f[i,2]>=f[i,1],return(0), s += f[i, 2]/f[i, 1])); (n*s));
    A328248(n) = { my(k=1); while(n && !issquarefree(n), k++; n = A003415checked(n)); (!!n*k); };
    isA328252(n) = (2==A328248(n));

A328242 Numbers k such that A003415(A276086(k)) is a squarefree number, where A003415 is the arithmetic derivative, and A276086 is the primorial base exp-function.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 17, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 46, 47, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 71, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 210, 211, 212, 213, 215, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 223, 225, 226, 227, 241, 242, 243, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 254, 255, 256, 257, 270, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Antti Karttunen, Oct 10 2019

Keywords

Comments

Numbers n such that A276086(n) is either in A328234 or in A000040 (i.e., it is a prime, in which case n itself is a primorial, A002110).

Crossrefs

Positions of 1's in A370130. Subsequence of A370132.
Cf. A328241 (complement).
Cf. A328233, A328240 (subsequences).

Programs

  • PARI
    A327860(n) = { my(s=0, m=1, p=2, e); while(n, e = (n%p); m *= (p^e); s += (e/p); n = n\p; p = nextprime(1+p)); (s*m); };
    isA328242(n) = issquarefree(A327860(n));
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