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.

Previous Showing 21-30 of 83 results. Next

A033954 Second 10-gonal (or decagonal) numbers: n*(4*n+3).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 7, 22, 45, 76, 115, 162, 217, 280, 351, 430, 517, 612, 715, 826, 945, 1072, 1207, 1350, 1501, 1660, 1827, 2002, 2185, 2376, 2575, 2782, 2997, 3220, 3451, 3690, 3937, 4192, 4455, 4726, 5005, 5292, 5587, 5890, 6201, 6520, 6847, 7182, 7525, 7876, 8235
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Same as A033951 except start at 0. See example section.
Bisection of A074377. Also sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 22, ... and the line from 7, in the direction 7, 45, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized 10-gonal numbers A074377. - Omar E. Pol, Jul 24 2012

Examples

			  36--37--38--39--40--41--42
   |                       |
  35  16--17--18--19--20  43
   |   |               |   |
  34  15   4---5---6  21  44
   |   |   |       |   |   |
  33  14   3   0===7==22==45==76=>
   |   |   |   |   |   |
  32  13   2---1   8  23
   |   |           |   |
  31  12--11--10---9  24
   |                   |
  30--29--28--27--26--25
		

References

  • S. M. Ellerstein, The square spiral, J. Recreational Mathematics 29 (#3, 1998) 188; 30 (#4, 1999-2000), 246-250.
  • R. L. Graham, D. E. Knuth and O. Patashnik, Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 2nd ed., 1994, p. 99.

Crossrefs

Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.
Second n-gonal numbers: A005449, A014105, A147875, A045944, A179986, this sequence, A062728, A135705.
Cf. A060544.

Programs

  • GAP
    List([0..50], n-> n*(4*n+3)) # G. C. Greubel, May 24 2019
  • Magma
    [n*(4*n+3): n in [0..50]]; // G. C. Greubel, May 24 2019
    
  • Mathematica
    Table[n(4n+3),{n,0,50}] (* or *) LinearRecurrence[{3,-3,1},{0,7,22},50] (* Harvey P. Dale, May 06 2018 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=4*n^2+3*n
    
  • Sage
    [n*(4*n+3) for n in (0..50)] # G. C. Greubel, May 24 2019
    

Formula

a(n) = A001107(-n) = A074377(2*n).
G.f.: x*(7+x)/(1-x)^3. - Michael Somos, Mar 03 2003
a(n) = a(n-1) + 8*n - 1 with a(0)=0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Jul 20 2010
For n>0, Sum_{j=0..n} (a(n) + j)^4 + (4*A000217(n))^3 = Sum_{j=n+1..2n} (a(n) + j)^4; see also A045944. - Charlie Marion, Dec 08 2007, edited by Michel Marcus, Mar 14 2014
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3) with a(0) = 0, a(1) = 7, a(2) = 22. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013
a(n) = A118729(8n+6). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013
a(n) = A002943(n) + n = A007742(n) + 2n = A016742(n) + 3n = A033991(n) + 4n = A002939(n) + 5n = A001107(n) + 6n = A033996(n) - n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 4/9 + Pi/6 - log(2) = 0.2748960394827980081... . - Vaclav Kotesovec, Apr 27 2016
E.g.f.: exp(x)*x*(7 + 4*x). - Stefano Spezia, Jun 08 2021
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = Pi/(3*sqrt(2)) + log(2)/3 - 4/9 - sqrt(2)*arcsinh(1)/3. - Amiram Eldar, Nov 28 2021
For n>0, (a(n)^2 + n)/(a(n) + n) = (4*n + 1)^2/4, a ratio of two squares. - Rick L. Shepherd, Feb 23 2022
a(n) = A060544(n+1) - A000217(n+1). - Leo Tavares, Mar 31 2022

A054569 a(n) = 4*n^2 - 6*n + 3.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 7, 21, 43, 73, 111, 157, 211, 273, 343, 421, 507, 601, 703, 813, 931, 1057, 1191, 1333, 1483, 1641, 1807, 1981, 2163, 2353, 2551, 2757, 2971, 3193, 3423, 3661, 3907, 4161, 4423, 4693, 4971, 5257, 5551, 5853, 6163, 6481, 6807, 7141, 7483, 7833, 8191
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Move in 1-7 direction in a spiral organized like A068225 etc.
Third row of A082039. - Paul Barry, Apr 02 2003
Inverse binomial transform of A036826. - Paul Barry, Jun 11 2003
Equals the "middle sequence" T(2*n,n) of the Connell sequence A001614 as a triangle. - Johannes W. Meijer, May 20 2011
Ulam's spiral (SW spoke). - Robert G. Wilson v, Oct 31 2011

Crossrefs

Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

Formula

a(n+1) = 4*n^2 + 2*n + 1. - Paul Barry, Apr 02 2003
a(n) = 4*n^2 - 6*n+3 - 3*0^n (with leading zero). - Paul Barry, Jun 11 2003
Binomial transform of [1, 6, 8, 0, 0, 0, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 28 2007
a(n) = 8*n + a(n-1) - 10 (with a(1)=1). - Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 07 2010
From Colin Barker, Mar 23 2012: (Start)
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3).
G.f.: x*(1+x)*(1+3*x)/(1-x)^3. (End)
a(n) = A000384(n) + A000384(n-1). - Bruce J. Nicholson, May 07 2017
E.g.f.: -3 + (3 - 2*x + 4*x^2)*exp(x). - G. C. Greubel, Jul 04 2019
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = A339237. - R. J. Mathar, Jan 22 2021

Extensions

Edited by Frank Ellermann, Feb 24 2002

A035608 Expansion of g.f. x*(1 + 3*x)/((1 + x)*(1 - x)^3).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 5, 10, 18, 27, 39, 52, 68, 85, 105, 126, 150, 175, 203, 232, 264, 297, 333, 370, 410, 451, 495, 540, 588, 637, 689, 742, 798, 855, 915, 976, 1040, 1105, 1173, 1242, 1314, 1387, 1463, 1540, 1620, 1701, 1785, 1870, 1958, 2047, 2139, 2232, 2328, 2425, 2525, 2626
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Maximum value of Voronoi's principal quadratic form of the first type when variables restricted to {-1,0,1}. - Michael Somos, Mar 10 2004
This is the main row of a version of the "square spiral" when read alternatively from left to right (see link). See also A001107, A007742, A033954, A033991. It is easy to see that the only prime in the sequence is 5. - Emilio Apricena (emilioapricena(AT)yahoo.it), Feb 08 2009
From Mitch Phillipson, Manda Riehl, Tristan Williams, Mar 06 2009: (Start)
a(n) gives the number of elements of S_2 \wr C_k that avoid the pattern 12, using the following ordering:
In S_j, a permutation p avoids a pattern q if it has no subsequence that is order-isomorphic to q. For example, p avoids the pattern 132 if it has no subsequence abc with a < c < b. We extend this notion to S_j \wr C_n as follows. Element psi =[ alpha_1^beta_1, ... alpha_j^beta_j ] avoids tau = [ a_1 ... a_m ] (tau in S_m) if psi' = [ alpha_1*beta_1 ... alpha_j*beta_j ] avoids tau in the usual sense. For n=2, there are 5 elements of S_2 \wr C_2 that avoid the pattern 12. They are: [ 2^1,1^1 ], [ 2^2,1^1 ], [ 2^2,1^2 ], [ 2^1,1^2 ], [ 1^2,2^1 ].
For example, if psi = [2^1,1^2], then psi'=[2,2] which avoids tau=[1,2] because no subsequence ab of psi' has a < b. (End)

References

  • J. H. Conway and N. J. A. Sloane, "Sphere Packings, Lattices and Groups", Springer-Verlag, p. 115.

Crossrefs

Partial sums of A042948.
Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

  • Magma
    [n^2 + n - 1 - Floor((n-1)/2): n in [0..25]]; // G. C. Greubel, Oct 29 2017
  • Maple
    A035608:=n->floor((n + 1/4)^2): seq(A035608(n), n=0..100); # Wesley Ivan Hurt, Oct 29 2017
  • Mathematica
    Table[n^2 + Floor[n/2], {n, 0, 100}] (* Vladimir Joseph Stephan Orlovsky, Apr 12 2011 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[x (1 + 3 x)/((1 + x) (1 - x)^3), {x, 0, 60}], x] (* or *) LinearRecurrence[{2, 0, -2, 1}, {0, 1, 5, 10}, 60] (* Harvey P. Dale, Feb 21 2013 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=n^2+n-1-(n-1)\2
    

Formula

a(n) = n^2 + n - 1 - floor((n-1)/2).
a(n) = A011848(2*n+1).
a(n) = A002378(n) - A004526(n+1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 27 2010
a(n) = 2*A006578(n) - A002378(n)/2 = A139592(n)/2. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 07 2010
a(n) = A002265(n+2) + A173562(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 21 2010
a(n) = floor((n + 1/4)^2). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 27 2010
a(n) = (-1)^n*Sum_{i=0..n} (-1)^i*(2*i^2 + 3*i + 1). Omits the leading 0. - William A. Tedeschi, Aug 25 2010
a(n) = n^2 + floor(n/2), from Mathematica section. - Vladimir Joseph Stephan Orlovsky, Apr 12 2011
a(0)=0, a(1)=1, a(2)=5, a(3)=10; for n > 3, a(n) = 2*a(n-1) - 2*a(n-3) + a(n-4). - Harvey P. Dale, Feb 21 2013
For n > 1: a(n) = a(n-2) + 4*n - 3; see also row sums of triangle A253146. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 27 2014
a(n) = 3*A002620(n) + A002620(n+1). - R. J. Mathar, Jul 18 2015
From Amiram Eldar, Mar 20 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 4 - 2*log(2) - Pi/3.
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 2*Pi/3 - 4*(1-log(2)). (End)
E.g.f.: (x*(2*x + 3)*cosh(x) + (2*x^2 + 3*x - 1)*sinh(x))/2. - Stefano Spezia, Apr 24 2024

A054554 a(n) = 4*n^2 - 10*n + 7.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 13, 31, 57, 91, 133, 183, 241, 307, 381, 463, 553, 651, 757, 871, 993, 1123, 1261, 1407, 1561, 1723, 1893, 2071, 2257, 2451, 2653, 2863, 3081, 3307, 3541, 3783, 4033, 4291, 4557, 4831, 5113, 5403, 5701, 6007, 6321, 6643, 6973, 7311, 7657, 8011, 8373, 8743
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Move in 1-3 direction in a spiral organized like A068225 etc.
Equals binomial transform of [1, 2, 8, 0, 0, 0, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, May 03 2008
Ulam's spiral (NE spoke). - Robert G. Wilson v, Oct 31 2011
Number of ternary strings of length 2*(n-1) that have one or no 0's, one or no 1's, and an even number of 2's. For n=2, the 3 strings of length 2 are 01, 10 and 22. For n=3, the 13 strings of length 4 are the 12 permutations of 0122 and 2222. - Enrique Navarrete, Jul 25 2025

Crossrefs

Cf. A014105.
Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = 8*n + a(n-1) - 14 with n > 1, a(1)=1. - Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 07 2010
G.f.: -x*(7*x^2+1)/(x-1)^3. - Colin Barker, Sep 21 2012
For n > 2, a(n) = A014105(n) + A014105(n-1). - Bruce J. Nicholson, May 07 2017
From Leo Tavares, Feb 21 2022: (Start)
a(n) = A003215(n-2) + 2*A000217(n-1). See Hexagonal Dual Rays illustration in links.
a(n) = A227776(n-1) - 4*A000217(n-1). (End)
a(k+1) = 4k^2 - 2k + 1 in the Numberphile video. - Frank Ellermann, Mar 11 2020
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(7 - 6*x + 4*x^2) - 7. - Stefano Spezia, Apr 24 2024

Extensions

Edited by Frank Ellermann, Feb 24 2002

A035008 Total number of possible knight moves on an (n+2) X (n+2) chessboard, if the knight is placed anywhere.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 16, 48, 96, 160, 240, 336, 448, 576, 720, 880, 1056, 1248, 1456, 1680, 1920, 2176, 2448, 2736, 3040, 3360, 3696, 4048, 4416, 4800, 5200, 5616, 6048, 6496, 6960, 7440, 7936, 8448, 8976, 9520, 10080, 10656, 11248, 11856, 12480, 13120, 13776
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Ulrich Schimke (ulrschimke(AT)aol.com), Dec 11 1999

Keywords

Comments

16 times the triangular numbers A000217.
Centered 16-gonal numbers A069129, minus 1. Also, sequence found by reading the segment (0, 16) together with the line from 16, in the direction 16, 48, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the triangular numbers A000217. - Omar E. Pol, Apr 26 2008, Nov 20 2008
For n >= 1, number of permutations of n+1 objects selected from 5 objects v, w, x, y, z with repetition allowed, containing n-1 v's. Examples: at n=1, n-1=0 (i.e., zero v's), and a(1)=16 because we have ww, wx, wy, wz, xw, xx, xy, xz, yw, yx, yy, yz, zw, zx, zy, zz; at n=2, n-1=1 (i.e., one v), and there are 3 permutations corresponding to each one in the n=1 case (e.g., the single v can be inserted in any of three places in the 2-object permutation xy, yielding vxy, xvy, and xyv), so a(2) = 3*a(1) = 3*16 = 48; at n=3, n-1=2 (i.e., two v's), and a(3) = C(4,2)*a(1) = 6*16 = 96; etc. - Zerinvary Lajos, Aug 07 2008 (this needs clarification, Joerg Arndt, Feb 23 2014)
Sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 16, ... and the same line from 0, in the direction 0, 48, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized 18-gonal numbers. - Omar E. Pol, Oct 03 2011
For n > 0, a(n) is the area of the triangle with vertices at ((n-1)^2, n^2), ((n+1)^2, (n+2)^2), and ((n+3)^2, (n+2)^2). - J. M. Bergot, May 22 2014
For n > 0, a(n) is the number of self-intersecting points in star polygon {4*(n+1)/(2*n+1)}. - Bui Quang Tuan, Mar 28 2015
Equivalently: integers k such that k$ / (k/2)! and k$ / (k/2+1)! are both squares when A000178 (k) = k$ = 1!*2!*...*k! is the superfactorial of k (see A348692 for further information). - Bernard Schott, Dec 02 2021

Examples

			3 X 3-Board: knight can be placed in 8 positions with 2 moves from each, so a(1) = 16.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A033586 (King), A035005 (Queen), A035006 (Rook), A002492 (Bishop) and A049450 (Pawn).
Cf. A348692.
Subsequence of A008586 and of A349081.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = 8*n*(n+1).
G.f.: 16*x/(1-x)^3.
a(n) = A069129(n+1) - 1. - Omar E. Pol, Apr 26 2008
a(n) = binomial(n+1,2)*4^2, n >= 0. - Zerinvary Lajos, Aug 07 2008
a(n) = 8*n^2 + 8*n = 16*A000217(n) = 8*A002378(n) = 4*A046092(n) = 2*A033996(n). - Omar E. Pol, Dec 12 2008
a(n) = a(n-1) + 16*n, with a(0)=0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Nov 17 2010
E.g.f.: 8*exp(x)*x*(2 + x). - Stefano Spezia, May 19 2021
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 22 2023: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 1/8.
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = (2*log(2) - 1)/8.
Product_{n>=1} (1 - 1/a(n)) = -(8/Pi)*cos(sqrt(3/2)*Pi/2).
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = (8/Pi)*cos(Pi/(2*sqrt(2))). (End)

Extensions

More terms from Erich Friedman
Minor errors corrected and edited by Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 04 2010

A028896 6 times triangular numbers: a(n) = 3*n*(n+1).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 6, 18, 36, 60, 90, 126, 168, 216, 270, 330, 396, 468, 546, 630, 720, 816, 918, 1026, 1140, 1260, 1386, 1518, 1656, 1800, 1950, 2106, 2268, 2436, 2610, 2790, 2976, 3168, 3366, 3570, 3780, 3996, 4218, 4446, 4680, 4920, 5166, 5418, 5676
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Joe Keane (jgk(AT)jgk.org), Dec 11 1999

Keywords

Comments

From Floor van Lamoen, Jul 21 2001: (Start)
Write 1,2,3,4,... in a hexagonal spiral around 0; then a(n) is the sequence found by reading the line from 0 in the direction 0, 6, ...
The spiral begins:
85--84--83--82--81--80
/ \
86 56--55--54--53--52 79
/ / \ \
87 57 33--32--31--30 51 78
/ / / \ \ \
88 58 34 16--15--14 29 50 77
/ / / / \ \ \ \
89 59 35 17 5---4 13 28 49 76
/ / / / / \ \ \ \ \
<==90==60==36==18===6===0 3 12 27 48 75
/ / / / / / / / / /
61 37 19 7 1---2 11 26 47 74
\ \ \ \ / / / /
62 38 20 8---9--10 25 46 73
\ \ \ / / /
63 39 21--22--23--24 45 72
\ \ / /
64 40--41--42--43--44 71
\ /
65--66--67--68--69--70
(End)
If Y is a 4-subset of an n-set X then, for n >= 5, a(n-5) is the number of (n-4)-subsets of X having exactly two elements in common with Y. - Milan Janjic, Dec 28 2007
a(n) is the maximal number of points of intersection of n+1 distinct triangles drawn in the plane. For example, two triangles can intersect in at most a(1) = 6 points (as illustrated in the Star of David configuration). - Terry Stickels (Terrystickels(AT)aol.com), Jul 12 2008
Also sequence found by reading the line from 0, in the direction 0, 6, ... and the same line from 0, in the direction 0, 18, ..., in the square spiral whose vertices are the generalized octagonal numbers A001082. Axis perpendicular to A195143 in the same spiral. - Omar E. Pol, Sep 18 2011
Partial sums of A008588. - R. J. Mathar, Aug 28 2014
Also the number of 5-cycles in the (n+5)-triangular honeycomb acute knight graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Jul 27 2017
a(n-4) is the maximum irregularity over all maximal 3-degenerate graphs with n vertices. The extremal graphs are 3-stars (K_3 joined to n-3 independent vertices). (The irregularity of a graph is the sum of the differences between the degrees over all edges of the graph.) - Allan Bickle, May 29 2023

Crossrefs

Cf. A002378 (3-cycles in triangular honeycomb acute knight graph), A045943 (4-cycles), A152773 (6-cycles).
Cf. A007531.
The partial sums give A007531. - Leo Tavares, Jan 22 2022
Cf. A002378, A046092, A028896 (irregularities of maximal k-degenerate graphs).

Programs

Formula

O.g.f.: 6*x/(1 - x)^3.
E.g.f.: 3*x*(x + 2)*exp(x). - G. C. Greubel, Aug 19 2017
a(n) = 6*A000217(n).
a(n) = polygorial(3, n+1). - Daniel Dockery (peritus(AT)gmail.com), Jun 16 2003
From Zerinvary Lajos, Mar 06 2007: (Start)
a(n) = A049598(n)/2.
a(n) = A124080(n) - A046092(n).
a(n) = A033996(n) - A002378(n). (End)
a(n) = A002378(n)*3 = A045943(n)*2. - Omar E. Pol, Dec 12 2008
a(n) = a(n-1) + 6*n for n>0, a(0)=0. - Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 05 2010
a(n) = A003215(n) - 1. - Omar E. Pol, Oct 03 2011
From Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2013: (Start)
a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3) for n>2, a(0)=0, a(1)=6, a(2)=18.
a(n) = A174709(6*n + 5). (End)
a(n) = A049450(n) + 4*n. - Lear Young, Apr 24 2014
a(n) = Sum_{i = n..2*n} 2*i. - Bruno Berselli, Feb 14 2018
a(n) = A320047(1, n, 1). - Kolosov Petro, Oct 04 2018
a(n) = T(3*n) - T(2*n-2) + T(n-2), where T(n) = A000217(n). In general, T(k)*T(n) = Sum_{i=0..k-1} (-1)^i*T((k-i)*(n-i)). - Charlie Marion, Dec 04 2020
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 15 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n) = 1/3.
Sum_{n>=1} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = 2*log(2)/3 - 1/3. (End)
From Amiram Eldar, Feb 21 2023: (Start)
Product_{n>=1} (1 - 1/a(n)) = -(3/Pi)*cos(sqrt(7/3)*Pi/2).
Product_{n>=1} (1 + 1/a(n)) = (3/Pi)*cosh(Pi/(2*sqrt(3))). (End)

A054556 a(n) = 4*n^2 - 9*n + 6.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 4, 15, 34, 61, 96, 139, 190, 249, 316, 391, 474, 565, 664, 771, 886, 1009, 1140, 1279, 1426, 1581, 1744, 1915, 2094, 2281, 2476, 2679, 2890, 3109, 3336, 3571, 3814, 4065, 4324, 4591, 4866, 5149, 5440, 5739, 6046, 6361, 6684, 7015, 7354, 7701, 8056, 8419, 8790
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Move in 1-4 direction in a spiral organized like A068225 etc.
Equals binomial transform of [1, 3, 8, 0, 0, 0, ...]. - Gary W. Adamson, Apr 30 2008
Ulam's spiral (N spoke). - Robert G. Wilson v, Oct 31 2011
Also, numbers of the form m*(4*m+1)+1 for nonpositive m. - Bruno Berselli, Jan 06 2016

Crossrefs

Cf. A266883: m*(4*m+1)+1 for m = 0,-1,1,-2,2,-3,3,...
Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

Formula

a(n)^2 = Sum_{i = 0..2*(4*n-5)} (4*n^2-13*n+9+i)^2*(-1)^i = ((n-1)*(4*n-5)+1)^2. - Bruno Berselli, Apr 29 2010
From Harvey P. Dale, Aug 21 2011: (Start)
a(0)=1, a(1)=4, a(2)=15; for n > 2, a(n) = 3*a(n-1) - 3*a(n-2) + a(n-3).
G.f.: -x*(6*x^2+x+1)/(x-1)^3. (End)
From Franck Maminirina Ramaharo, Mar 09 2018: (Start)
a(n) = binomial(2*n - 2, 2) + 2*(n - 1)^2 + 1.
a(n) = A000384(n-1) + A058331(n-1).
a(n) = A130883(n-1) + A001105(n-1). (End)
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(6 - 5*x + 4*x^2) - 6. - Stefano Spezia, Apr 24 2024

Extensions

Edited by Frank Ellermann, Feb 24 2002
Incorrect formula deleted by N. J. A. Sloane, Aug 02 2009

A054567 a(n) = 4*n^2 - 7*n + 4.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 6, 19, 40, 69, 106, 151, 204, 265, 334, 411, 496, 589, 690, 799, 916, 1041, 1174, 1315, 1464, 1621, 1786, 1959, 2140, 2329, 2526, 2731, 2944, 3165, 3394, 3631, 3876, 4129, 4390, 4659, 4936, 5221, 5514, 5815, 6124, 6441, 6766, 7099, 7440, 7789, 8146, 8511, 8884
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

The number 1 is placed in the middle of a sheet of squared paper and the numbers 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, etc. are written in a clockwise spiral around 1, as in A068225 etc. This sequence is read off along one of the rays from 1.
Ulam's spiral (W spoke of A054552). - Robert G. Wilson v, Oct 31 2011
Also, numbers of the form m*(4*m+1)+1 for nonnegative m. - Bruno Berselli, Jan 06 2016
The sequence forms the 1x2 diagonal of the square maze arrangement in A081344. - Jarrod G. Sage, Jul 17 2024

Crossrefs

Cf. A266883: m*(4*m+1)+1 for m = 0,-1,1,-2,2,-3,3,...
Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = 8*n+a(n-1)-11 for n>1, a(1)=1. - Vincenzo Librandi, Aug 07 2010
a(n) = A204674(n-1) / n. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 18 2012
From Colin Barker, Oct 25 2014: (Start)
a(n) = 3*a(n-1)-3*a(n-2)+a(n-3).
G.f.: -x*(4*x^2+3*x+1) / (x-1)^3. (End)
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(4 - 3*x + 4*x^2) - 4. - Stefano Spezia, Apr 24 2024
a(n) = A016742(n-1) + n. - Jarrod G. Sage, Jul 17 2024

Extensions

Edited by Frank Ellermann, Feb 24 2002
Typo fixed by Charles R Greathouse IV, Oct 28 2009

A080335 Diagonal in square spiral or maze arrangement of natural numbers.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 5, 9, 17, 25, 37, 49, 65, 81, 101, 121, 145, 169, 197, 225, 257, 289, 325, 361, 401, 441, 485, 529, 577, 625, 677, 729, 785, 841, 901, 961, 1025, 1089, 1157, 1225, 1297, 1369, 1445, 1521, 1601, 1681, 1765, 1849, 1937, 2025, 2117, 2209, 2305, 2401, 2501
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Paul Barry, Mar 19 2003

Keywords

Comments

Interleaves the odd squares A016754 with (1+4n^2), A053755.
Squares of positive integers (plus 1 if n is odd). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Oct 10 2013
a(n) is the maximum total number of queens that can coexist without attacking each other on an [n+3] X [n+3] chessboard, when the lone queen is in the most vulnerable position on the board. Specifically, the lone queen will placed in any center position, facing an opponent's "army" of size a(n)-1 == A137932(n+2). - Bob Selcoe, Feb 12 2015
a(n) is also the edge chromatic number of the complement of the (n+2) X (n+2) rook graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Jan 31 2024

Crossrefs

Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = (3 + 4*n + 2*n^2 - (-1)^n)/2.
a(2*n) = A016754(n), a(2*n+1) = A053755(n+1).
E.g.f.: exp(x)*(2 + 3*x + x^2) - cosh(x). The sequence 1,1,5,9,... is given by n^2+(1+(-1)^n)/2 with e.g.f. exp(1+x+x^2)*exp(x)-sinh(x). - Paul Barry, Sep 02 2003 and Sep 19 2003
a(0)=1, a(1)=5, a(2)=9, a(3)=17, a(n) = 2*a(n-1) - 2*a(n-3) + a(n-4). - Harvey P. Dale, Jan 29 2012
a(n)+(-1)^n = A137928(n+1). - Philippe Deléham, Feb 17 2012
G.f.: (1 + 3*x - x^2 + x^3)/((1-x)^3*(1+x)). - Colin Barker, Mar 18 2012
a(n) = A000035(n) + A000290(n+1). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Oct 10 2013
From Bob Selcoe, Feb 12 2015: (Start)
a(n) = A137932(n+2) + 1.
a(n) = (n+1)^2 when n is even; a(n) = (n+1)^2 + 1 when n is odd.
a(n) = A002378(n+2) - A047238(n+3) + 1.
(End)
Sum_{n>=0} 1/a(n) = Pi*coth(Pi/2)/4 + Pi^2/8 - 1/2. - Amiram Eldar, Jul 07 2022

A137932 Terms in an n X n spiral that do not lie on its principal diagonals.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 0, 4, 8, 16, 24, 36, 48, 64, 80, 100, 120, 144, 168, 196, 224, 256, 288, 324, 360, 400, 440, 484, 528, 576, 624, 676, 728, 784, 840, 900, 960, 1024, 1088, 1156, 1224, 1296, 1368, 1444, 1520, 1600, 1680, 1764, 1848, 1936, 2024, 2116, 2208, 2304, 2400, 2500, 2600, 2704, 2808
Offset: 0

Views

Author

William A. Tedeschi, Feb 29 2008

Keywords

Comments

The count of terms not on the principal diagonals is always even.
The last digit is the repeating pattern 0,0,0,4,8,6,4,6,8,4, which is palindromic if the leading 0's are removed, 4864684.
The sum of the last digits is 40, which is the count of the pattern times 4.
A 4 X 4 spiral is the only spiral, aside from a 0 X 0, whose count of terms that do not lie on its principal diagonals equal the count of terms that do [A137932(4) = A042948(4)] making the 4 X 4 the "perfect spiral".
Yet another property is mod(a(n), A042948(n)) = 0 iff n is even. This is a large family that includes the 4 X 4 spiral.
a(n) is the maximum number of queens of one color that can coexist without attacking one queen of the opponent's color on an [n+1] X [n+1] chessboard, when the lone queen is in the most vulnerable position on the board, i.e., on a center square. - Bob Selcoe, Feb 12 2015
Also the circumference of the (n-1) X (n-1) grid graph for n > 2. - Eric W. Weisstein, Mar 25 2018
Also the crossing number of the complete bipartite graph K_{5,n}. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 11 2018

Examples

			a(0) = 0^2 - (2(0) - mod(0,2)) = 0.
a(3) = 3^2 - (2(3) - mod(3,2)) = 4.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A042948.
Sequences on the four axes of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A001107, A033991, A007742, A033954; starting at 1: A054552, A054556, A054567, A033951.
Sequences on the four diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A002939 = 2*A000384, A016742 = 4*A000290, A002943 = 2*A014105, A033996 = 8*A000217; starting at 1: A054554, A053755, A054569, A016754.
Sequences obtained by reading alternate terms on the X and Y axes and the two main diagonals of the square spiral: Starting at 0: A035608, A156859, A002378 = 2*A000217, A137932 = 4*A002620; starting at 1: A317186, A267682, A002061, A080335.

Programs

Formula

a(n) = n^2 - (2*n - mod(n,2)) = n^2 - A042948(n).
a(n) = 2*A007590(n-1). - Enrique Pérez Herrero, Jul 04 2012
G.f.: -4*x^3 / ( (1+x)*(x-1)^3 ). a(n) = 4*A002620(n-1). - R. J. Mathar, Jul 06 2012
From Bob Selcoe, Feb 12 2015: (Start)
a(n) = (n-1)^2 when n is odd; a(n) = (n-1)^2 - 1 when n is even.
a(n) = A002378(n) - A047238(n+1). (End)
From Amiram Eldar, Mar 20 2022: (Start)
Sum_{n>=3} 1/a(n) = Pi^2/24 + 1/4.
Sum_{n>=3} (-1)^(n+1)/a(n) = Pi^2/24 - 1/4. (End)
E.g.f.: x*(x - 1)*cosh(x) + (x^2 - x + 1)*sinh(x). - Stefano Spezia, Oct 17 2022
Previous Showing 21-30 of 83 results. Next