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.

A338801 Irregular table read by rows: The number of k-faced polyhedra, where k>=4, created when an n-prism, formed from two n-sided regular polygons joined by n adjacent rectangles, is internally cut by all the planes defined by any three of its vertices.

Original entry on oeis.org

17, 0, 1, 72, 24, 575, 450, 232, 60, 15, 0, 3, 1728, 1668, 948, 144, 24, 12, 8799, 10080, 6321, 3052, 898, 490, 161, 14, 35, 14, 7, 22688, 24080, 12784, 4160, 1248, 272, 80, 32, 78327, 101142, 70254, 39708, 19584, 6894, 2369, 1062, 351, 54, 27, 18, 27, 36, 11, 165500, 203220, 134860, 62520, 21240, 5720, 1080, 300, 100, 20
Offset: 3

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Author

Scott R. Shannon, Nov 10 2020

Keywords

Comments

See A338783 for further details and images for this sequence.
The author thanks Zach J. Shannon for assistance in producing the images for this sequence.

Examples

			The triangular 3-prism is cut with 6 internal planes defined by all 3-vertex combinations of its 6 vertices. This leads to the creation of seventeen 4-faced polyhedra and one 6-faced polyhedra, eighteen pieces in all. The single 6-faced polyhedra lies at the very center of the original 3-prism.
The 9-prism is cut with 207 internal planes leading to the creation of 319864 pieces. It is noteworthy in creating all k-faced polyhedra from k=4 to k=18.
The table begins:
17,0,1;
72,24;
575,450,232,60,15,0,3;
1728,1668,948,144,24,12;
8799,10080,6321,3052,898,490,161,14,35,14,7;
22688,24080,12784,4160,1248,272,80,32;
78327,101142,70254,39708,19584,6894,2369,1062,351,54,27,18,27,36,11;
165500,203220,134860,62520,21240,5720,1080,300,100,20;
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A338783 (number of polyhedra), A338808 (antiprism), A338622 (Platonic solids), A333543 (n-dimensional cube).

Formula

Sum of row n = A338783(n).