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 1-5 of 5 results.

A338904 Irregular triangle read by rows where row n lists all semiprimes whose prime indices sum to n.

Original entry on oeis.org

4, 6, 9, 10, 14, 15, 21, 22, 25, 26, 33, 35, 34, 39, 49, 55, 38, 51, 65, 77, 46, 57, 85, 91, 121, 58, 69, 95, 119, 143, 62, 87, 115, 133, 169, 187, 74, 93, 145, 161, 209, 221, 82, 111, 155, 203, 247, 253, 289, 86, 123, 185, 217, 299, 319, 323, 94, 129, 205
Offset: 2

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Nov 28 2020

Keywords

Comments

A semiprime is a product of any two prime numbers. A prime index of n is a number m such that the m-th prime number divides n. The multiset of prime indices of n is row n of A112798.

Examples

			Triangle begins:
   4
   6
   9  10
  14  15
  21  22  25
  26  33  35
  34  39  49  55
  38  51  65  77
  46  57  85  91 121
  58  69  95 119 143
  62  87 115 133 169 187
  74  93 145 161 209 221
  82 111 155 203 247 253 289
  86 123 185 217 299 319 323
  94 129 205 259 341 361 377 391
		

Crossrefs

A004526 gives row lengths.
A024697 gives row sums.
A087112 is a different triangle of semiprimes.
A098350 has antidiagonals with the same distinct terms as these rows.
A338905 is the squarefree case, with row sums A025129.
A338907/A338906 are the union of odd/even rows.
A339114/A339115 are the row minima/maxima.
A001358 lists semiprimes, with odd/even terms A046315/A100484.
A006881 lists squarefree semiprimes, with odd/even terms A046388/A100484.
A014342 is the self-convolution of primes.
A037143 lists primes and semiprimes.
A056239 gives sum of prime indices (Heinz weight).
A062198 gives partial sums of semiprimes.
A084126 and A084127 give the prime factors of semiprimes.
A289182/A115392 list the positions of odd/even terms in A001358.
A332765 gives the greatest squarefree semiprime of weight n.
A338898, A338912, and A338913 give the prime indices of semiprimes, with product A087794, sum A176504, and difference A176506.
A338899, A270650, and A270652 give the prime indices of squarefree semiprimes, with difference A338900.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Sort[Table[Prime[k]*Prime[n-k],{k,n/2}]],{n,2,10}]

A339114 Least semiprime whose prime indices sum to n.

Original entry on oeis.org

4, 6, 9, 14, 21, 26, 34, 38, 46, 58, 62, 74, 82, 86, 94, 106, 118, 122, 134, 142, 146, 158, 166, 178, 194, 202, 206, 214, 218, 226, 254, 262, 274, 278, 298, 302, 314, 326, 334, 346, 358, 362, 382, 386, 394, 398, 422, 446, 454, 458, 466, 478, 482, 502, 514, 526
Offset: 2

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Nov 28 2020

Keywords

Comments

Converges to A100484.
After a(4) = 9, also the least squarefree semiprime whose prime indices sum to n.
A semiprime is a product of any two prime numbers. A prime index of n is a number m such that the m-th prime number divides n. The multiset of prime indices of n is row n of A112798.

Examples

			The sequence of terms together with their prime indices begins:
      4: {1,1}     106: {1,16}    254: {1,31}
      6: {1,2}     118: {1,17}    262: {1,32}
      9: {2,2}     122: {1,18}    274: {1,33}
     14: {1,4}     134: {1,19}    278: {1,34}
     21: {2,4}     142: {1,20}    298: {1,35}
     26: {1,6}     146: {1,21}    302: {1,36}
     34: {1,7}     158: {1,22}    314: {1,37}
     38: {1,8}     166: {1,23}    326: {1,38}
     46: {1,9}     178: {1,24}    334: {1,39}
     58: {1,10}    194: {1,25}    346: {1,40}
     62: {1,11}    202: {1,26}    358: {1,41}
     74: {1,12}    206: {1,27}    362: {1,42}
     82: {1,13}    214: {1,28}    382: {1,43}
     86: {1,14}    218: {1,29}    386: {1,44}
     94: {1,15}    226: {1,30}    394: {1,45}
		

Crossrefs

A024697 is the sum of the same semiprimes.
A098350 has this sequence as antidiagonal minima.
A338904 has this sequence as row minima.
A339114 (this sequence) is the squarefree case for n > 4.
A339115 is the greatest among the same semiprimes.
A001358 lists semiprimes, with odd/even terms A046315/A100484.
A006881 lists squarefree semiprimes, with odd/even terms A046388/A100484.
A037143 lists primes and semiprimes.
A056239 gives the sum of prime indices of n.
A084126 and A084127 give the prime factors of semiprimes.
A087112 groups semiprimes by greater factor.
A320655 counts factorizations into semiprimes.
A332765/A332877 is the greatest squarefree semiprime of weight n.
A338898, A338912, and A338913 give the prime indices of semiprimes, with product A087794, sum A176504, and difference A176506.
A338899, A270650, and A270652 give the prime indices of squarefree semiprimes, with difference A338900.
A338907/A338906 list semiprimes of odd/even weight.
A338907/A338908 list squarefree semiprimes of odd/even weight.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Min@@Table[Prime[k]*Prime[n-k],{k,n-1}],{n,2,30}]
    Take[DeleteDuplicates[SortBy[{Times@@#,Total[PrimePi[#]]}&/@Tuples[ Prime[ Range[ 200]],2],{Last,First}],GreaterEqual[#1[[2]],#2[[2]]]&][[All,1]],60] (* Harvey P. Dale, Sep 06 2022 *)
  • PARI
    a(n) = vecmin(vector(n-1, k, prime(k)*prime(n-k))); \\ Michel Marcus, Dec 03 2020

A332765 Consider all permutations p_i of the first n primes; a(n) is the minimum over p_i of the maximal product of two adjacent primes in the permutation.

Original entry on oeis.org

6, 10, 15, 22, 35, 55, 77, 91, 143, 187, 221, 253, 323, 391, 493, 551, 667, 713, 899, 1073, 1189, 1271, 1517, 1591, 1763, 1961, 2183, 2419, 2537, 2773, 3127, 3233, 3599, 3953, 4189, 4331, 4757, 4897, 5293, 5723, 5963, 6499, 6887, 7171, 7663, 8051, 8633, 8989, 9797, 9991, 10403, 10807
Offset: 2

Views

Author

Bobby Jacobs, Apr 23 2020

Keywords

Comments

The optimal permutation of n primes is {p_n, p_1, p_n-1, p_2, …, p_ceiling(n/2)}. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 28 2020
Also the greatest squarefree semiprime whose prime indices sum to n + 1. A squarefree semiprime (A006881) is a product of any two distinct prime numbers. A prime index of n is a number m such that the m-th prime number divides n. The multiset of prime indices of n is row n of A112798. - Gus Wiseman, Dec 06 2020

Examples

			Here are the ways (up to reversal) to order the first four primes:
  2, 3, 5, 7: Products: 6, 15, 35;  Largest product: 35
  2, 3, 7, 5: Products: 6, 21, 35;  Largest product: 35
  2, 5, 3, 7: Products: 10, 15, 21; Largest product: 21
  2, 5, 7, 3: Products: 10, 35, 21; Largest product: 35
  2, 7, 3, 5: Products: 14, 21, 15; Largest product: 21
  2, 7, 5, 3: Products: 14, 35, 15; Largest product: 35
  3, 2, 5, 7: Products: 6, 10, 35;  Largest product: 35
  3, 2, 7, 5: Products: 6, 14, 35;  Largest product: 35
  3, 5, 2, 7: Products: 15, 10, 14; Largest product: 15
  3, 7, 2, 5: Products: 21, 14, 10; Largest product: 21
  5, 2, 3, 7: Products: 10, 6, 21;  Largest product: 21
  5, 3, 2, 7: Products: 15, 6, 14;  Largest product: 15
The minimum largest product is 15, so a(4) = 15.
From _Gus Wiseman_, Dec 06 2020: (Start)
The sequence of terms together with their prime indices begins:
      6: {1,2}     551: {8,10}    3127: {16,17}
     10: {1,3}     667: {9,10}    3233: {16,18}
     15: {2,3}     713: {9,11}    3599: {17,18}
     22: {1,5}     899: {10,11}   3953: {17,19}
     35: {3,4}    1073: {10,12}   4189: {17,20}
     55: {3,5}    1189: {10,13}   4331: {18,20}
     77: {4,5}    1271: {11,13}   4757: {19,20}
     91: {4,6}    1517: {12,13}   4897: {17,23}
    143: {5,6}    1591: {12,14}   5293: {19,22}
    187: {5,7}    1763: {13,14}   5723: {17,25}
    221: {6,7}    1961: {12,16}   5963: {19,24}
    253: {5,9}    2183: {12,17}   6499: {19,25}
    323: {7,8}    2419: {13,17}   6887: {20,25}
    391: {7,9}    2537: {14,17}   7171: {20,26}
    493: {7,10}   2773: {15,17}   7663: {22,25}
(End)
		

Crossrefs

A338904 and A338905 have this sequence as row maxima.
A339115 is the not necessarily squarefree version.
A001358 lists semiprimes.
A005117 lists squarefree numbers.
A006881 lists squarefree semiprimes.
A025129 gives the sum of squarefree semiprimes of weight n.
A056239 (weight) gives the sum of prime indices of n.
A320656 counts factorizations into squarefree semiprimes.
A338898/A338912/A338913 give the prime indices of semiprimes, with product/sum/difference A087794/A176504/A176506.
A338899/A270650/A270652 give the prime indices of squarefree semiprimes, with product/sum/difference A339361/A339362/A338900.
A338907/A338908 list squarefree semiprimes of odd/even weight.
A339114 is the least (squarefree) semiprime of weight n.
A339116 groups squarefree semiprimes by greater prime factor.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    primes[n_]:=Reverse[Prime/@Range[n]]; partition[n_]:=Partition[primes[n],UpTo[Ceiling[n/2]]];
    riffle[n_]:=Riffle[partition[n][[1]],Reverse[partition[n][[2]]]];
    a[n_]:=Max[Table[riffle[n][[i]]*riffle[n][[i+1]],{i,1,n-1}]];a/@Range[2,53]
    (* Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 28 2020 *)

Formula

It appears that a(n) = A332877(n - 1) for n > 5.

Extensions

a(12)-a(13) from Jinyuan Wang, Apr 24 2020
More terms from Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 28 2020

A339115 Greatest semiprime whose prime indices sum to n.

Original entry on oeis.org

4, 6, 10, 15, 25, 35, 55, 77, 121, 143, 187, 221, 289, 323, 391, 493, 551, 667, 841, 899, 1073, 1189, 1369, 1517, 1681, 1763, 1961, 2183, 2419, 2537, 2809, 3127, 3481, 3599, 3953, 4189, 4489, 4757, 5041, 5293, 5723, 5963, 6499, 6887, 7171, 7663, 8051, 8633
Offset: 2

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Nov 28 2020

Keywords

Comments

A semiprime is a product of any two prime numbers. A prime index of n is a number m such that the m-th prime number divides n. The multiset of prime indices of n is row n of A112798.

Examples

			The sequence of terms together with their prime indices begins:
        4: {1,1}      493: {7,10}      2809: {16,16}
        6: {1,2}      551: {8,10}      3127: {16,17}
       10: {1,3}      667: {9,10}      3481: {17,17}
       15: {2,3}      841: {10,10}     3599: {17,18}
       25: {3,3}      899: {10,11}     3953: {17,19}
       35: {3,4}     1073: {10,12}     4189: {17,20}
       55: {3,5}     1189: {10,13}     4489: {19,19}
       77: {4,5}     1369: {12,12}     4757: {19,20}
      121: {5,5}     1517: {12,13}     5041: {20,20}
      143: {5,6}     1681: {13,13}     5293: {19,22}
      187: {5,7}     1763: {13,14}     5723: {17,25}
      221: {6,7}     1961: {12,16}     5963: {19,24}
      289: {7,7}     2183: {12,17}     6499: {19,25}
      323: {7,8}     2419: {13,17}     6887: {20,25}
      391: {7,9}     2537: {14,17}     7171: {20,26}
		

Crossrefs

A024697 is the sum of the same semiprimes.
A332765/A332877 is the squarefree case.
A338904 has this sequence as row maxima.
A339114 is the least among the same semiprimes.
A001358 lists semiprimes, with odd/even terms A046315/A100484.
A006881 lists squarefree semiprimes, with odd/even terms A046388/A100484.
A037143 lists primes and semiprimes.
A084126 and A084127 give the prime factors of semiprimes.
A087112 groups semiprimes by greater factor.
A320655 counts factorizations into semiprimes.
A338898, A338912, and A338913 give the prime indices of semiprimes, with product A087794, sum A176504, and difference A176506.
A338899, A270650, and A270652 give the prime indices of squarefree semiprimes, with difference A338900.
A338907/A338906 list semiprimes of odd/even weight.
A338907/A338908 list squarefree semiprimes of odd/even weight.

Programs

  • Maple
    P:= [seq(ithprime(i),i=1..200)]:
    [seq(max(seq(P[i]*P[j-i],i=1..j-1)),j=2..200)]; # Robert Israel, Dec 06 2020
  • Mathematica
    Table[Max@@Table[Prime[k]*Prime[n-k],{k,n-1}],{n,2,30}]

A333747 Numbers that are either the product of two consecutive primes or two primes with a prime in between.

Original entry on oeis.org

6, 10, 15, 21, 35, 55, 77, 91, 143, 187, 221, 247, 323, 391, 437, 551, 667, 713, 899, 1073, 1147, 1271, 1517, 1591, 1763, 1927, 2021, 2279, 2491, 2773, 3127, 3233, 3599, 3953, 4087, 4331, 4757, 4891, 5183, 5609, 5767, 6059, 6557, 7031, 7387, 8051, 8633, 8989, 9797, 9991
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Bobby Jacobs, Apr 03 2020

Keywords

Comments

In other words, these are numbers that are the product of two distinct primes whose prime indices differ by at most two.

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Maple
    R:= NULL;
    p:= 2; q:= 3;
    for n from 1 to 100 by 2 do
      r:= nextprime(q);
      R:= R, p*q, p*r;
      p:= q; q:= r;
    od:
    R; # Robert Israel, Apr 22 2020
  • Mathematica
    a[n_] := Prime[Ceiling[n/2]] * Prime[Ceiling[(n + 3)/2]]; Array[a, 50] (* Amiram Eldar, Apr 04 2020 *)

Formula

Union of A006094 and A090076.
a(n) = prime(ceiling(n/2))*prime(ceiling((n+3)/2)).
a(2*n-1) = prime(n)*prime(n+1).
a(2*n) = prime(n)*prime(n+2).
Showing 1-5 of 5 results.