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.

A363295 Numbers k such that k and k+20 are consecutive unitary weird numbers (A064114).

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%I A363295 #9 May 26 2023 05:46:14
%S A363295 34121990,34428290,34766810,34936070,38014970,38152010,39506090,
%T A363295 39844610,41400170,42044990,42552770,42584990,43769810,46276490,
%U A363295 46308710,47155010,47324270,47461310,49016870,49153910,49323170,49661690,49863170,50540210,51015770,51354290,53079110
%N A363295 Numbers k such that k and k+20 are consecutive unitary weird numbers (A064114).
%C A363295 Conjecture: All the unitary weird numbers are of the form 20*k + 10, and thus 20 is the least gap between consecutive unitary weird numbers (verified for the 16326260 unitary weird numbers below 10^10).
%H A363295 Amiram Eldar, <a href="/A363295/b363295.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..17846</a> (terms below 10^10)
%e A363295 34121990 is a term since 34121990 = A064114(53235) and 34122010 = 34121990 + 20 = A064114(53236) are consecutive unitary weird numbers.
%Y A363295 Cf. A064114, A306952, A363296.
%K A363295 nonn
%O A363295 1,1
%A A363295 _Amiram Eldar_, May 26 2023