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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A005940 The Doudna sequence: write n-1 in binary; power of prime(k) in a(n) is # of 1's that are followed by k-1 0's.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 8, 7, 10, 15, 12, 25, 18, 27, 16, 11, 14, 21, 20, 35, 30, 45, 24, 49, 50, 75, 36, 125, 54, 81, 32, 13, 22, 33, 28, 55, 42, 63, 40, 77, 70, 105, 60, 175, 90, 135, 48, 121, 98, 147, 100, 245, 150, 225, 72, 343, 250, 375, 108, 625, 162, 243, 64, 17, 26, 39
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

Comments

A permutation of the natural numbers. - Robert G. Wilson v, Feb 22 2005
Fixed points: A029747. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 23 2006
The even bisection, when halved, gives the sequence back. - Antti Karttunen, Jun 28 2014
From Antti Karttunen, Dec 21 2014: (Start)
This irregular table can be represented as a binary tree. Each child to the left is obtained by applying A003961 to the parent, and each child to the right is obtained by doubling the parent:
1
|
...................2...................
3 4
5......../ \........6 9......../ \........8
/ \ / \ / \ / \
/ \ / \ / \ / \
/ \ / \ / \ / \
7 10 15 12 25 18 27 16
11 14 21 20 35 30 45 24 49 50 75 36 125 54 81 32
etc.
Sequence A163511 is obtained by scanning the same tree level by level, from right to left. Also in binary trees A253563 and A253565 the terms on level of the tree are some permutation of the terms present on the level n of this tree. A252464(n) gives the distance of n from 1 in all these trees.
A252737(n) gives the sum and A252738(n) the product of terms on row n (where 1 is on row 0, 2 on row 1, 3 and 4 on row 2, etc.). A252745(n) gives the number of nodes on level n whose left child is larger than the right child, A252750 the difference between left and right child for each node from node 2 onward.
(End)
-A008836(a(1+n)) gives the corresponding numerator for A323505(n). - Antti Karttunen, Jan 19 2019
(a(2n+1)-1)/2 [= A244154(n)-1, for n >= 0] is a permutation of the natural numbers. - George Beck and Antti Karttunen, Dec 08 2019
From Peter Munn, Oct 04 2020: (Start)
Each term has the same even part (equivalently, the same 2-adic valuation) as its index.
Using the tree depicted in Antti Karttunen's 2014 comment:
Numbers are on the right branch (4 and descendants) if and only if divisible by the square of their largest prime factor (cf. A070003).
Numbers on the left branch, together with 2, are listed in A102750.
(End)
According to Kutz (1981), he learned of this sequence from American mathematician Byron Leon McAllister (1929-2017) who attributed the invention of the sequence to a graduate student by the name of Doudna (first name Paul?) in the mid-1950's at the University of Wisconsin. - Amiram Eldar, Jun 17 2021
From David James Sycamore, Sep 23 2022: (Start)
Alternative (recursive) definition: If n is a power of 2 then a(n)=n. Otherwise, if 2^j is the greatest power of 2 not exceeding n, and if k = n - 2^j, then a(n) is the least m*a(k) that has not occurred previously, where m is an odd prime.
Example: Use recursion with n = 77 = 2^6 + 13. a(13) = 25 and since 11 is the smallest odd prime m such that m*a(13) has not already occurred (see a(27), a(29),a(45)), then a(77) = 11*25 = 275. (End)
The odd bisection, when transformed by replacing all prime(k)^e in a(2*n - 1) with prime(k-1)^e, returns a(n), and thus gives the sequence back. - David James Sycamore, Sep 28 2022

Examples

			From _N. J. A. Sloane_, Aug 22 2022: (Start)
Let c_i = number of 1's in binary expansion of n-1 that have i 0's to their right, and let p(j) = j-th prime.  Then a(n) = Product_i p(i+1)^c_i.
If n=9, n-1 is 1000, c_3 = 1, a(9) = p(4)^1 = 7.
If n=10, n-1 = 1001, c_0 = 1, c_2 = 1, a(10) = p(1)*p(3) = 2*5 = 10.
If n=11, n-1 = 1010, c_1 = 1, c_2 = 1, a(11) = p(2)*p(3) = 15. (End)
		

References

  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

Cf. A103969. Inverse is A005941 (A156552).
Cf. A125106. [From Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Mar 06 2010]
Cf. A252737 (gives row sums), A252738 (row products), A332979 (largest on row).
Related permutations of positive integers: A163511 (via A054429), A243353 (via A006068), A244154, A253563 (via A122111), A253565, A332977, A334866 (via A225546).
A000120, A003602, A003961, A006519, A053645, A070939, A246278, A250246, A252753, A253552 are used in a formula defining this sequence.
Formulas for f(a(n)) are given for f = A000265, A003963, A007949, A055396, A056239.
Numbers that occur at notable sets of positions in the binary tree representation of the sequence: A000040, A000079, A002110, A070003, A070826, A102750.
Cf. A106737, A290077, A323915, A324052, A324054, A324055, A324056, A324057, A324058, A324114, A324335, A324340, A324348, A324349 for various number-theoretical sequences applied to (i.e., permuted by) this sequence.
k-adic valuation: A007814 (k=2), A337821 (k=3).
Positions of multiples of 3: A091067.
Primorial deflation: A337376 / A337377.
Sum of prime indices of a(n) is A161511, reverse version A359043.
A048793 lists binary indices, ranked by A019565.
A066099 lists standard comps, partial sums A358134 (ranked by A358170).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a005940 n = f (n - 1) 1 1 where
       f 0 y _          = y
       f x y i | m == 0 = f x' y (i + 1)
               | m == 1 = f x' (y * a000040 i) i
               where (x',m) = divMod x 2
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 03 2012
    (Scheme, with memoization-macro definec from Antti Karttunen's IntSeq-library)
    (define (A005940 n) (A005940off0 (- n 1))) ;; The off=1 version, utilizing any one of three different offset-0 implementations:
    (definec (A005940off0 n) (cond ((< n 2) (+ 1 n)) (else (* (A000040 (- (A070939 n) (- (A000120 n) 1))) (A005940off0 (A053645 n))))))
    (definec (A005940off0 n) (cond ((<= n 2) (+ 1 n)) ((even? n) (A003961 (A005940off0 (/ n 2)))) (else (* 2 (A005940off0 (/ (- n 1) 2))))))
    (define (A005940off0 n) (let loop ((n n) (i 1) (x 1)) (cond ((zero? n) x) ((even? n) (loop (/ n 2) (+ i 1) x)) (else (loop (/ (- n 1) 2) i (* x (A000040 i)))))))
    ;; Antti Karttunen, Jun 26 2014
    
  • Maple
    f := proc(n,i,x) option remember ; if n = 0 then x; elif type(n,'even') then procname(n/2,i+1,x) ; else procname((n-1)/2,i,x*ithprime(i)) ; end if; end proc:
    A005940 := proc(n) f(n-1,1,1) ; end proc: # R. J. Mathar, Mar 06 2010
  • Mathematica
    f[n_] := Block[{p = Partition[ Split[ Join[ IntegerDigits[n - 1, 2], {2}]], 2]}, Times @@ Flatten[ Table[q = Take[p, -i]; Prime[ Count[ Flatten[q], 0] + 1]^q[[1, 1]], {i, Length[p]}] ]]; Table[ f[n], {n, 67}] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Feb 22 2005 *)
    Table[Times@@Prime/@(Join@@Position[Reverse[IntegerDigits[n,2]],1]-Range[DigitCount[n,2,1]]+1),{n,0,100}] (* Gus Wiseman, Dec 28 2022 *)
  • PARI
    A005940(n) = { my(p=2, t=1); n--; until(!n\=2, n%2 && (t*=p) || p=nextprime(p+1)); t } \\ M. F. Hasler, Mar 07 2010; update Aug 29 2014
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=my(p=2, t=1); for(i=0,exponent(n), if(bittest(n,i), t*=p, p=nextprime(p+1))); t \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Nov 11 2021
    
  • Python
    from sympy import prime
    import math
    def A(n): return n - 2**int(math.floor(math.log(n, 2)))
    def b(n): return n + 1 if n<2 else prime(1 + (len(bin(n)[2:]) - bin(n)[2:].count("1"))) * b(A(n))
    print([b(n - 1) for n in range(1, 101)]) # Indranil Ghosh, Apr 10 2017
    
  • Python
    from math import prod
    from itertools import accumulate
    from collections import Counter
    from sympy import prime
    def A005940(n): return prod(prime(len(a)+1)**b for a, b in Counter(accumulate(bin(n-1)[2:].split('1')[:0:-1])).items()) # Chai Wah Wu, Mar 10 2023

Formula

From Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 23 2006, R. J. Mathar, Mar 06 2010: (Start)
a(n) = f(n-1, 1, 1)
where f(n, i, x) = x if n = 0,
= f(n/2, i+1, x) if n > 0 is even
= f((n-1)/2, i, x*prime(i)) otherwise. (End)
From Antti Karttunen, Jun 26 2014: (Start)
Define a starting-offset 0 version of this sequence as:
b(0)=1, b(1)=2, [base cases]
and then compute the rest either with recurrence:
b(n) = A000040(1+(A070939(n)-A000120(n))) * b(A053645(n)).
or
b(2n) = A003961(b(n)), b(2n+1) = 2 * b(n). [Compare this to the similar recurrence given for A163511.]
Then define a(n) = b(n-1), where a(n) gives this sequence A005940 with the starting offset 1.
Can be also defined as a composition of related permutations:
a(n+1) = A243353(A006068(n)).
a(n+1) = A163511(A054429(n)). [Compare the scatter plots of this sequence and A163511 to each other.]
This permutation also maps between the partitions as enumerated in the lists A125106 and A112798, providing identities between:
A161511(n) = A056239(a(n+1)). [The corresponding sums ...]
A243499(n) = A003963(a(n+1)). [... and the products of parts of those partitions.]
(End)
From Antti Karttunen, Dec 21 2014 - Jan 04 2015: (Start)
A002110(n) = a(1+A002450(n)). [Primorials occur at (4^n - 1)/3 in the offset-0 version of the sequence.]
a(n) = A250246(A252753(n-1)).
a(n) = A122111(A253563(n-1)).
For n >= 1, A055396(a(n+1)) = A001511(n).
For n >= 2, a(n) = A246278(1+A253552(n)).
(End)
From Peter Munn, Oct 04 2020: (Start)
A000265(a(n)) = a(A000265(n)) = A003961(a(A003602(n))).
A006519(a(n)) = a(A006519(n)) = A006519(n).
a(n) = A003961(a(A003602(n))) * A006519(n).
A007814(a(n)) = A007814(n).
A007949(a(n)) = A337821(n) = A007814(A003602(n)).
a(n) = A225546(A334866(n-1)).
(End)
a(2n) = 2*a(n), or generally a(2^k*n) = 2^k*a(n). - Amiram Eldar, Oct 03 2022
If n-1 = Sum_{i} 2^(q_i-1), then a(n) = Product_{i} prime(q_i-i+1). These are the Heinz numbers of the rows of A125106. If the offset is changed to 0, the inverse is A156552. - Gus Wiseman, Dec 28 2022

Extensions

More terms from Robert G. Wilson v, Feb 22 2005
Sign in a formula switched and Maple program added by R. J. Mathar, Mar 06 2010
Binary tree illustration and keyword tabf added by Antti Karttunen, Dec 21 2014

A003602 Kimberling's paraphrases: if n = (2k-1)*2^m then a(n) = k.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 3, 2, 4, 1, 5, 3, 6, 2, 7, 4, 8, 1, 9, 5, 10, 3, 11, 6, 12, 2, 13, 7, 14, 4, 15, 8, 16, 1, 17, 9, 18, 5, 19, 10, 20, 3, 21, 11, 22, 6, 23, 12, 24, 2, 25, 13, 26, 7, 27, 14, 28, 4, 29, 15, 30, 8, 31, 16, 32, 1, 33, 17, 34, 9, 35, 18, 36, 5, 37, 19, 38, 10, 39, 20, 40, 3, 41, 21, 42
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Fractal sequence obtained from powers of 2.
k occurs at (2*k-1)*A000079(m), m >= 0. - Robert G. Wilson v, May 23 2006
Sequence is T^(oo)(1) where T is acting on a word w = w(1)w(2)..w(m) as follows: T(w) = "1"w(1)"2"w(2)"3"(...)"m"w(m)"m+1". For instance T(ab) = 1a2b3. Thus T(1) = 112, T(T(1)) = 1121324, T(T(T(1))) = 112132415362748. - Benoit Cloitre, Mar 02 2009
Note that iterating the post-numbering operator U(w) = w(1) 1 w(2) 2 w(3) 3... produces the same limit sequence except with an additional "1" prepended, i.e., 1,1,1,2,1,3,2,4,... - Glen Whitney, Aug 30 2023
In the binary expansion of n, first swallow all zeros from the right, then add 1, and swallow the now-appearing 0 bit as well. - Ralf Stephan, Aug 22 2013
Although A264646 and this sequence initially agree in their digit-streams, they differ after 48 digits. - N. J. A. Sloane, Nov 20 2015
"[This is a] fractal because we get the same sequence after we delete from it the first appearance of all positive integers" - see Cobeli and Zaharescu link. - Robert G. Wilson v, Jun 03 2018
From Peter Munn, Jun 16 2022: (Start)
The sequence is the list of positive integers interleaved with the sequence itself. Provided the offset is suitable (which is the case here) a term of such a self-interleaved sequence is determined by the odd part of its index. Putting some of the formulas given here into words, a(n) is the position of the odd part of n in the list of odd numbers.
Applying the interleaving transform again, we get A110963.
(End)
Omitting all 1's leaves A131987 + 1. - David James Sycamore, Jul 26 2022
a(n) is also the smallest positive number not among the terms between a(a(n-1)) and a(n-1) inclusive (with a(0)=1 prepended). - Neal Gersh Tolunsky, Mar 07 2023

Examples

			From _Peter Munn_, Jun 14 2022: (Start)
Start of table showing the interleaving with the positive integers:
   n  a(n)  (n+1)/2  a(n/2)
   1    1      1
   2    1               1
   3    2      2
   4    1               1
   5    3      3
   6    2               2
   7    4      4
   8    1               1
   9    5      5
  10    3               3
  11    6      6
  12    2               2
(End)
		

References

  • Michel Rigo, Formal Languages, Automata and Numeration Systems, 2 vols., Wiley, 2014. Mentions this sequence - see "List of Sequences" in Vol. 2.
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).

Crossrefs

a(n) is the index of the column in A135764 where n appears (see also A054582).
Cf. A000079, A000265, A001511, A003603, A003961, A014577 (with offset 1, reduction mod 2), A025480, A035528, A048673, A101279, A110963, A117303, A126760, A181988, A220466, A249745, A253887, A337821 (2-adic valuation).
Cf. also A349134 (Dirichlet inverse), A349135 (sum with it), A349136 (Möbius transform), A349431, A349371 (inverse Möbius transform).
Cf. A264646.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a003602 = (`div` 2) . (+ 1) . a000265
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 16 2012, Oct 14 2010
    
  • Haskell
    import Data.List (transpose)
    a003602 = flip div 2 . (+ 1) . a000265
    a003602_list = concat $ transpose [[1..], a003602_list]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 09 2013, May 23 2013
    
  • Maple
    A003602:=proc(n) options remember: if n mod 2 = 1 then RETURN((n+1)/2) else RETURN(procname(n/2)) fi: end proc:
    seq(A003602(n), n=1..83); # Pab Ter
    nmax := 83: for m from 0 to ceil(simplify(log[2](nmax))) do for k from 1 to ceil(nmax/(m+2)) do a((2*k-1)*2^m) := k od: od: seq(a(k), k=1..nmax); # Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 04 2013
    A003602 := proc(n)
        a := 1;
        for p in ifactors(n)[2] do
            if op(1,p) > 2 then
                a := a*op(1,p)^op(2,p) ;
            end if;
        end do  :
        (a+1)/2 ;
    end proc: # R. J. Mathar, May 19 2016
  • Mathematica
    a[n_] := Block[{m = n}, While[ EvenQ@m, m /= 2]; (m + 1)/2]; Array[a, 84] (* or *)
    a[1] = 1; a[n_] := a[n] = If[OddQ@n, (n + 1)/2, a[n/2]]; Array[a, 84] (* Robert G. Wilson v, May 23 2006 *)
    a[n_] := Ceiling[NestWhile[Floor[#/2] &, n, EvenQ]/2]; Array[a, 84] (* Birkas Gyorgy, Apr 05 2011 *)
    a003602 = {1}; max = 7; Do[b = {}; Do[AppendTo[b, {k, a003602[[k]]}], {k, Length[a003602]}]; a003602 = Flatten[b], {n, 2, max}]; a003602 (* L. Edson Jeffery, Nov 21 2015 *)
  • PARI
    A003602(n)=(n/2^valuation(n,2)+1)/2; /* Joerg Arndt, Apr 06 2011 */
    
  • Python
    import math
    def a(n): return (n/2**int(math.log(n - (n & n - 1), 2)) + 1)/2 # Indranil Ghosh, Apr 24 2017
    
  • Python
    def A003602(n): return (n>>(n&-n).bit_length())+1 # Chai Wah Wu, Jul 08 2022
  • Scheme
    (define (A003602 n) (let loop ((n n)) (if (even? n) (loop (/ n 2)) (/ (+ 1 n) 2)))) ;; Antti Karttunen, Feb 04 2015
    

Formula

a(n) = (A000265(n) + 1)/2.
a((2*k-1)*2^m) = k, for m >= 0 and k >= 1. - Robert G. Wilson v, May 23 2006
Inverse Weigh transform of A035528. - Christian G. Bower
G.f.: 1/x * Sum_{k>=0} x^2^k/(1-2*x^2^(k+1) + x^2^(k+2)). - Ralf Stephan, Jul 24 2003
a(2*n-1) = n and a(2*n) = a(n). - Pab Ter (pabrlos2(AT)yahoo.com), Oct 25 2005
a(A118413(n,k)) = A002024(n,k); = a(A118416(n,k)) = A002260(n,k); a(A014480(n)) = A001511(A014480(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 27 2006
Ordinal transform of A001511. - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Aug 28 2006
a(n) = A249745(A126760(A003961(n))) = A249745(A253887(A048673(n))). That is, this sequence plays the same role for the numbers in array A135764 as A126760 does for the odd numbers in array A135765. - Antti Karttunen, Feb 04 2015 & Jan 19 2016
G.f. satisfies g(x) = g(x^2) + x/(1-x^2)^2. - Robert Israel, Apr 24 2015
a(n) = A181988(n)/A001511(n). - L. Edson Jeffery, Nov 21 2015
a(n) = A025480(n-1) + 1. - R. J. Mathar, May 19 2016
a(n) = A110963(2n-1) = A349135(4*n). - Antti Karttunen, Apr 18 2022
a(n) = (1 + n)/2, for n odd; a(n) = a(n/2), for n even. - David James Sycamore, Jul 28 2022
a(n) = n/2^A001511(n) + 1/2. - Alan Michael Gómez Calderón, Oct 06 2023
a(n) = A123390(A118319(n)). - Flávio V. Fernandes, Mar 02 2025

Extensions

More terms from Pab Ter (pabrlos2(AT)yahoo.com), Oct 25 2005

A337376 Primorial deflation (numerator) of Doudna-tree.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 3, 9, 8, 7, 10, 5, 6, 25, 9, 27, 16, 11, 14, 21, 20, 7, 5, 15, 12, 49, 50, 25, 9, 125, 27, 81, 32, 13, 22, 33, 28, 55, 21, 63, 40, 11, 14, 7, 10, 35, 15, 45, 24, 121, 98, 147, 100, 49, 25, 25, 18, 343, 250, 125, 27, 625, 81, 243, 64, 17, 26, 39, 44, 65, 33, 99, 56, 91, 110, 55, 42, 275, 63, 189, 80, 13, 22
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Tree with both numerators (this sequence) and denominators (A337377) shown starts as:
1/1
|
2
-
1
3 / \ 4
- ................. ................. -
2 1
5 / \ 3 9 / \ 8
- ....... ....... - - ....... ....... -
3 1 4 1
/ \ / \ / \ / \
/ \ / \ / \ / \
/ \ / \ / \ / \
7 10 5 6 25 9 27 16
- -- - - -- - -- --
5 3 2 1 9 2 8 1
/ \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \
11 14 21 20 7 5 15 12 49 50 25 9 125 27 81 32
-- -- -- -- - - -- -- -- -- -- - --- -- -- --
7 5 10 3 3 1 4 1 25 9 6 1 27 4 16 1
etc.

Crossrefs

A005940, A319626, A337375 are used in a formula defining this sequence.
Cf. A064989.
Cf. A337377 (denominators).
A000265, A001222, A003961, A007814, A337821 are used to express relationship between terms of this sequence.
Cf. also A329886, A346096.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Array[#1/GCD[#1, #2] & @@ {#, Apply[Times, Map[If[#1 <= 2, 1, NextPrime[#1, -1]]^#2 & @@ # &, FactorInteger[#]]]} &@ Function[p, Times @@ Flatten@ Table[Prime[Count[Flatten[#], 0] + 1]^#[[1, 1]] &@ Take[p, -i], {i, Length[p]}]]@ Partition[Split[Join[IntegerDigits[# - 1, 2], {2}]], 2] &, 82] (* Michael De Vlieger, Aug 27 2020 *)
  • PARI
    A005940(n) = { my(p=2, t=1); n--; until(!n\=2, if((n%2), (t*=p), p=nextprime(p+1))); (t); };
    A064989(n) = {my(f); f = factor(n); if((n>1 && f[1,1]==2), f[1,2] = 0); for (i=1, #f~, f[i,1] = precprime(f[i,1]-1)); factorback(f)};
    A319626(n) = (n / gcd(n, A064989(n)));
    A337376(n) = A319626(A005940(1+n));

Formula

a(n) = A319626(A005940(1+n)).
a(n) = A005940(1+n) / A337375(n).
a(2*n) = A003961(a(n)).
If A007814(n+1) < A337821(n+1) then a(2*n+1) = a(n), otherwise a(2*n+1) = 2 * a(n).
If A337377(n) mod 2 = 0 then a(2*n+1) = a(n), otherwise a(2*n+1) = 2 * a(n).
A000265(a(2*n+1)) = A000265(a(n)).
A001222(a(2*n)) = A001222(A337377(2*n)) = A001222(a(n)).
A001222(a(2*n+1)) - A001222(A337377(2*n+1)) = 1 + A001222(a(n)) - A001222(A337377(n)).
Showing 1-3 of 3 results.