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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A309843 Numbers m that equal the sum of their first k consecutive aliquot infinitary divisors, but not all of them (i.e k < A037445(m) - 1).

Original entry on oeis.org

24, 360, 4320, 14688, 1468800, 9547200, 50585472, 54198720, 189695520, 1680459264
Offset: 1

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Author

Amiram Eldar, Sep 14 2019

Keywords

Comments

The infinitary version of Erdős-Nicolas numbers (A194472).
If all the aliquot infinitary divisors are permitted (i.e. k <= A037445(n) - 1), then the infinitary perfect numbers (A007357) are included.

Examples

			24 is in the sequence since its aliquot infinitary divisors are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12 and 24 and 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 6 + 8 = 24.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    idivs[x_] := If[x == 1, 1, Sort@ Flatten@ Outer[Times, Sequence @@ (FactorInteger[ x ] /. {p_, m_Integer} :> p^Select[Range[0, m], BitOr[m, #] == m &])]]; subtr = If[#1 < #2, Throw[#1], #1 - #2] &; selDivs[n_] := Catch@Fold[subtr, n, Drop[idivs[n], -2]]; s= {}; Do[If[selDivs[n] == 0, AppendTo[s, n]], {n, 2, 10^6}]; s(* after Alonso del Arte at A194472 *)

A000079 Powers of 2: a(n) = 2^n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, 32768, 65536, 131072, 262144, 524288, 1048576, 2097152, 4194304, 8388608, 16777216, 33554432, 67108864, 134217728, 268435456, 536870912, 1073741824, 2147483648, 4294967296, 8589934592
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

2^0 = 1 is the only odd power of 2.
Number of subsets of an n-set.
There are 2^(n-1) compositions (ordered partitions) of n (see for example Riordan). This is the unlabeled analog of the preferential labelings sequence A000670.
This is also the number of weakly unimodal permutations of 1..n + 1, that is, permutations with exactly one local maximum. E.g., a(4) = 16: 12345, 12354, 12453, 12543, 13452, 13542, 14532 and 15432 and their reversals. - Jon Perry, Jul 27 2003 [Proof: see next line! See also A087783.]
Proof: n must appear somewhere and there are 2^(n-1) possible choices for the subset that precedes it. These must appear in increasing order and the rest must follow n in decreasing order. QED. - N. J. A. Sloane, Oct 26 2003
a(n+1) is the smallest number that is not the sum of any number of (distinct) earlier terms.
Same as Pisot sequences E(1, 2), L(1, 2), P(1, 2), T(1, 2). See A008776 for definitions of Pisot sequences.
With initial 1 omitted, same as Pisot sequences E(2, 4), L(2, 4), P(2, 4), T(2, 4). - David W. Wilson
Not the sum of two or more consecutive numbers. - Lekraj Beedassy, May 14 2004
Least deficient or near-perfect numbers (i.e., n such that sigma(n) = A000203(n) = 2n - 1). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jun 03 2004. [Comment from Max Alekseyev, Jan 26 2005: All the powers of 2 are least deficient numbers but it is not known if there exists a least deficient number that is not a power of 2.]
Almost-perfect numbers referred to as least deficient or slightly defective (Singh 1997) numbers. Does "near-perfect numbers" refer to both almost-perfect numbers (sigma(n) = 2n - 1) and quasi-perfect numbers (sigma(n) = 2n + 1)? There are no known quasi-perfect or least abundant or slightly excessive (Singh 1997) numbers.
The sum of the numbers in the n-th row of Pascal's triangle; the sum of the coefficients of x in the expansion of (x+1)^n.
The Collatz conjecture (the hailstone sequence will eventually reach the number 1, regardless of which positive integer is chosen initially) may be restated as (the hailstone sequence will eventually reach a power of 2, regardless of which positive integer is chosen initially).
The only hailstone sequence which doesn't rebound (except "on the ground"). - Alexandre Wajnberg, Jan 29 2005
With p(n) as the number of integer partitions of n, p(i) is the number of parts of the i-th partition of n, d(i) is the number of different parts of the i-th partition of n, m(i,j) is the multiplicity of the j-th part of the i-th partition of n, one has: a(n) = Sum_{i = 1..p(n)} (p(i)! / (Product_{j=1..d(i)} m(i,j)!)). - Thomas Wieder, May 18 2005
The number of binary relations on an n-element set that are both symmetric and antisymmetric. Also the number of binary relations on an n-element set that are symmetric, antisymmetric and transitive.
The first differences are the sequence itself. - Alexandre Wajnberg and Eric Angelini, Sep 07 2005
a(n) is the largest number with shortest addition chain involving n additions. - David W. Wilson, Apr 23 2006
Beginning with a(1) = 0, numbers not equal to the sum of previous distinct natural numbers. - Giovanni Teofilatto, Aug 06 2006
For n >= 1, a(n) is equal to the number of functions f:{1, 2, ..., n} -> {1, 2} such that for a fixed x in {1, 2, ..., n} and a fixed y in {1, 2} we have f(x) != y. - Aleksandar M. Janjic and Milan Janjic, Mar 27 2007
Let P(A) be the power set of an n-element set A. Then a(n) is the number of pairs of elements {x,y} of P(A) for which x = y. - Ross La Haye, Jan 09 2008
a(n) is the number of permutations on [n+1] such that every initial segment is an interval of integers. Example: a(3) counts 1234, 2134, 2314, 2341, 3214, 3241, 3421, 4321. The map "p -> ascents of p" is a bijection from these permutations to subsets of [n]. An ascent of a permutation p is a position i such that p(i) < p(i+1). The permutations shown map to 123, 23, 13, 12, 3, 2, 1 and the empty set respectively. - David Callan, Jul 25 2008
2^(n-1) is the largest number having n divisors (in the sense of A077569); A005179(n) is the smallest. - T. D. Noe, Sep 02 2008
a(n) appears to match the number of divisors of the modified primorials (excluding 2, 3 and 5). Very limited range examined, PARI example shown. - Bill McEachen, Oct 29 2008
Successive k such that phi(k)/k = 1/2, where phi is Euler's totient function. - Artur Jasinski, Nov 07 2008
A classical transform consists (for general a(n)) in swapping a(2n) and a(2n+1); examples for Jacobsthal A001045 and successive differences: A092808, A094359, A140505. a(n) = A000079 leads to 2, 1, 8, 4, 32, 16, ... = A135520. - Paul Curtz, Jan 05 2009
This is also the (L)-sieve transform of {2, 4, 6, 8, ..., 2n, ...} = A005843. (See A152009 for the definition of the (L)-sieve transform.) - John W. Layman, Jan 23 2009
a(n) = a(n-1)-th even natural number (A005843) for n > 1. - Jaroslav Krizek, Apr 25 2009
For n >= 0, a(n) is the number of leaves in a complete binary tree of height n. For n > 0, a(n) is the number of nodes in an n-cube. - K.V.Iyer, May 04 2009
Permutations of n+1 elements where no element is more than one position right of its original place. For example, there are 4 such permutations of three elements: 123, 132, 213, and 312. The 8 such permutations of four elements are 1234, 1243, 1324, 1423, 2134, 2143, 3124, and 4123. - Joerg Arndt, Jun 24 2009
Catalan transform of A099087. - R. J. Mathar, Jun 29 2009
a(n) written in base 2: 1,10,100,1000,10000,..., i.e., (n+1) times 1, n times 0 (A011557(n)). - Jaroslav Krizek, Aug 02 2009
Or, phi(n) is equal to the number of perfect partitions of n. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Oct 10 2009
These are the 2-smooth numbers, positive integers with no prime factors greater than 2. - Michael B. Porter, Oct 04 2009
A064614(a(n)) = A000244(n) and A064614(m) < A000244(n) for m < a(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 08 2010
a(n) is the largest number m such that the number of steps of iterations of {r - (largest divisor d < r)} needed to reach 1 starting at r = m is equal to n. Example (a(5) = 32): 32 - 16 = 16; 16 - 8 = 8; 8 - 4 = 4; 4 - 2 = 2; 2 - 1 = 1; number 32 has 5 steps and is the largest such number. See A105017, A064097, A175125. - Jaroslav Krizek, Feb 15 2010
a(n) is the smallest proper multiple of a(n-1). - Dominick Cancilla, Aug 09 2010
The powers-of-2 triangle T(n, k), n >= 0 and 0 <= k <= n, begins with: {1}; {2, 4}; {8, 16, 32}; {64, 128, 256, 512}; ... . The first left hand diagonal T(n, 0) = A006125(n + 1), the first right hand diagonal T(n, n) = A036442(n + 1) and the center diagonal T(2*n, n) = A053765(n + 1). Some triangle sums, see A180662, are: Row1(n) = A122743(n), Row2(n) = A181174(n), Fi1(n) = A181175(n), Fi2(2*n) = A181175(2*n) and Fi2(2*n + 1) = 2*A181175(2*n + 1). - Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 10 2010
Records in the number of prime factors. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Mar 12 2011
Row sums of A152538. - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 10 2008
A078719(a(n)) = 1; A006667(a(n)) = 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 08 2011
The compositions of n in which each natural number is colored by one of p different colors are called p-colored compositions of n. For n>=1, a(n) equals the number of 2-colored compositions of n such that no adjacent parts have the same color. - Milan Janjic, Nov 17 2011
Equals A001405 convolved with its right-shifted variant: (1 + 2x + 4x^2 + ...) = (1 + x + 2x^2 + 3x^3 + 6x^4 + 10x^5 + ...) * (1 + x + x^2 + 2x^3 + 3x^4 + 6x^5 + ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Nov 23 2011
The number of odd-sized subsets of an n+1-set. For example, there are 2^3 odd-sized subsets of {1, 2, 3, 4}, namely {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {1, 2, 3}, {1, 2, 4}, {1, 3, 4}, and {2, 3, 4}. Also, note that 2^n = Sum_{k=1..floor((n+1)/2)} C(n+1, 2k-1). - Dennis P. Walsh, Dec 15 2011
a(n) is the number of 1's in any row of Pascal's triangle (mod 2) whose row number has exactly n 1's in its binary expansion (see A007318 and A047999). (The result of putting together A001316 and A000120.) - Marcus Jaiclin, Jan 31 2012
A204455(k) = 1 if and only if k is in this sequence. - Wolfdieter Lang, Feb 04 2012
For n>=1 apparently the number of distinct finite languages over a unary alphabet, whose minimum regular expression has alphabetic width n (verified up to n=17), see the Gruber/Lee/Shallit link. - Hermann Gruber, May 09 2012
First differences of A000225. - Omar E. Pol, Feb 19 2013
This is the lexicographically earliest sequence which contains no arithmetic progression of length 3. - Daniel E. Frohardt, Apr 03 2013
a(n-2) is the number of bipartitions of {1..n} (i.e., set partitions into two parts) such that 1 and 2 are not in the same subset. - Jon Perry, May 19 2013
Numbers n such that the n-th cyclotomic polynomial has a root mod 2; numbers n such that the n-th cyclotomic polynomial has an even number of odd coefficients. - Eric M. Schmidt, Jul 31 2013
More is known now about non-power-of-2 "Almost Perfect Numbers" as described in Dagal. - Jonathan Vos Post, Sep 01 2013
Number of symmetric Ferrers diagrams that fit into an n X n box. - Graham H. Hawkes, Oct 18 2013
Numbers n such that sigma(2n) = 2n + sigma(n). - Jahangeer Kholdi, Nov 23 2013
a(1), ..., a(floor(n/2)) are all values of permanent on set of square (0,1)-matrices of order n>=2 with row and column sums 2. - Vladimir Shevelev, Nov 26 2013
Numbers whose base-2 expansion has exactly one bit set to 1, and thus has base-2 sum of digits equal to one. - Stanislav Sykora, Nov 29 2013
A072219(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 20 2014
a(n) is the largest number k such that (k^n-2)/(k-2) is an integer (for n > 1); (k^a(n)+1)/(k+1) is never an integer (for k > 1 and n > 0). - Derek Orr, May 22 2014
If x = A083420(n), y = a(n+1) and z = A087289(n), then x^2 + 2*y^2 = z^2. - Vincenzo Librandi, Jun 09 2014
The mini-sequence b(n) = least number k > 0 such that 2^k ends in n identical digits is given by {1, 18, 39}. The repeating digits are {2, 4, 8} respectively. Note that these are consecutive powers of 2 (2^1, 2^2, 2^3), and these are the only powers of 2 (2^k, k > 0) that are only one digit. Further, this sequence is finite. The number of n-digit endings for a power of 2 with n or more digits id 4*5^(n-1). Thus, for b(4) to exist, one only needs to check exponents up to 4*5^3 = 500. Since b(4) does not exist, it is clear that no other number will exist. - Derek Orr, Jun 14 2014
The least number k > 0 such that 2^k ends in n consecutive decreasing digits is a 3-number sequence given by {1, 5, 25}. The consecutive decreasing digits are {2, 32, 432}. There are 100 different 3-digit endings for 2^k. There are no k-values such that 2^k ends in '987', '876', '765', '654', '543', '321', or '210'. The k-values for which 2^k ends in '432' are given by 25 mod 100. For k = 25 + 100*x, the digit immediately before the run of '432' is {4, 6, 8, 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 0, 2, ...} for x = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, ...}, respectively. Thus, we see the digit before '432' will never be a 5. So, this sequence is complete. - Derek Orr, Jul 03 2014
a(n) is the number of permutations of length n avoiding both 231 and 321 in the classical sense which are breadth-first search reading words of increasing unary-binary trees. For more details, see the entry for permutations avoiding 231 at A245898. - Manda Riehl, Aug 05 2014
Numbers n such that sigma(n) = sigma(2n) - phi(4n). - Farideh Firoozbakht, Aug 14 2014
This is a B_2 sequence: for i < j, differences a(j) - a(i) are all distinct. Here 2*a(n) < a(n+1) + 1, so a(n) - a(0) < a(n+1) - a(n). - Thomas Ordowski, Sep 23 2014
a(n) counts n-walks (closed) on the graph G(1-vertex; 1-loop, 1-loop). - David Neil McGrath, Dec 11 2014
a(n-1) counts walks (closed) on the graph G(1-vertex; 1-loop, 2-loop, 3-loop, 4-loop, ...). - David Neil McGrath, Jan 01 2015
b(0) = 4; b(n+1) is the smallest number not in the sequence such that b(n+1) - Prod_{i=0..n} b(i) divides b(n+1) - Sum_{i=0..n} b(i). Then b(n) = a(n) for n > 2. - Derek Orr, Jan 15 2015
a(n) counts the permutations of length n+2 whose first element is 2 such that the permutation has exactly one descent. - Ran Pan, Apr 17 2015
a(0)-a(30) appear, with a(26)-a(30) in error, in tablet M 08613 (see CDLI link) from the Old Babylonian period (c. 1900-1600 BC). - Charles R Greathouse IV, Sep 03 2015
Subsequence of A028982 (the squares or twice squares sequence). - Timothy L. Tiffin, Jul 18 2016
A000120(a(n)) = 1. A000265(a(n)) = 1. A000593(a(n)) = 1. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Aug 16 2016
Number of monotone maps f : [0..n] -> [0..n] which are order-increasing (i <= f(i)) and idempotent (f(f(i)) = f(i)). In other words, monads on the n-th ordinal (seen as a posetal category). Any monad f determines a subset of [0..n] that contains n, by considering its set of monad algebras = fixed points { i | f(i) = i }. Conversely, any subset S of [0..n] containing n determines a monad on [0..n], by the function i |-> min { j | i <= j, j in S }. - Noam Zeilberger, Dec 11 2016
Consider n points lying on a circle. Then for n>=2 a(n-2) gives the number of ways to connect two adjacent points with nonintersecting chords. - Anton Zakharov, Dec 31 2016
Satisfies Benford's law [Diaconis, 1977; Berger-Hill, 2017] - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 07 2017
Also the number of independent vertex sets and vertex covers in the n-empty graph. - Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017
Also the number of maximum cliques in the n-halved cube graph for n > 4. - Eric W. Weisstein, Dec 04 2017
Number of pairs of compositions of n corresponding to a seaweed algebra of index n-1. - Nick Mayers, Jun 25 2018
The multiplicative group of integers modulo a(n) is cyclic if and only if n = 0, 1, 2. For n >= 3, it is a product of two cyclic groups. - Jianing Song, Jun 27 2018
k^n is the determinant of n X n matrix M_(i, j) = binomial(k + i + j - 2, j) - binomial(i+j-2, j), in this case k=2. - Tony Foster III, May 12 2019
Solutions to the equation Phi(2n + 2*Phi(2n)) = 2n. - M. Farrokhi D. G., Jan 03 2020
a(n-1) is the number of subsets of {1,2,...,n} which have an element that is the size of the set. For example, for n = 4, a(3) = 8 and the subsets are {1}, {1,2}, {2,3}, {2,4}, {1,2,3}, {1,3,4}, {2,3,4}, {1,2,3,4}. - Enrique Navarrete, Nov 21 2020
a(n) is the number of self-inverse (n+1)-order permutations with 231-avoiding. E.g., a(3) = 8: [1234, 1243, 1324, 1432, 2134, 2143, 3214, 4321]. - Yuchun Ji, Feb 26 2021
For any fixed k > 0, a(n) is the number of ways to tile a strip of length n+1 with tiles of length 1, 2, ... k, where the tile of length k can be black or white, with the restriction that the first tile cannot be black. - Greg Dresden and Bora Bursalı, Aug 31 2023

Examples

			There are 2^3 = 8 subsets of a 3-element set {1,2,3}, namely { -, 1, 2, 3, 12, 13, 23, 123 }.
		

References

  • Milton Abramowitz and Irene A. Stegun, eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards Applied Math. Series 55, 1964 (and various reprintings), p. 1016.
  • Mohammad K. Azarian, A Generalization of the Climbing Stairs Problem, Mathematics and Computer Education Journal, Vol. 31, No. 1, pp. 24-28, Winter 1997.
  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 73, 84.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §4.5 Logarithms and §8.1 Terminology, pp. 150, 264.
  • Paul J. Nahin, An Imaginary Tale: The Story of sqrt(-1), Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. 1998, pp. 69-70.
  • Alfred S. Posamentier, Math Charmers, Tantalizing Tidbits for the Mind, Prometheus Books, NY, 2003, page 273.
  • J. Riordan, An Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis, Wiley, 1958, p. 124.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
  • V. E. Tarakanov, Combinatorial problems on binary matrices, Combin. Analysis, MSU, 5 (1980), 4-15. (Russian)
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, page 141.
  • S. Wolfram, A New Kind of Science, Wolfram Media, 2002; p. 55.

Crossrefs

This is the Hankel transform (see A001906 for the definition) of A000984, A002426, A026375, A026387, A026569, A026585, A026671 and A032351. - John W. Layman, Jul 31 2000
Euler transform of A001037, A209406 (multisets), inverse binomial transform of A000244, binomial transform of A000012.
Complement of A057716.
Boustrophedon transforms: A000734, A000752.
Range of values of A006519, A007875, A011782, A030001, A034444, A037445, A053644, and A054243.
Cf. A018900, A014311, A014312, A014313, A023688, A023689, A023690, A023691 (sum of 2, ..., 9 distinct powers of 2).
Cf. A090129.
The following are parallel families: A000079 (2^n), A004094 (2^n reversed), A028909 (2^n sorted up), A028910 (2^n sorted down), A036447 (double and reverse), A057615 (double and sort up), A263451 (double and sort down); A000244 (3^n), A004167 (3^n reversed), A321540 (3^n sorted up), A321539 (3^n sorted down), A163632 (triple and reverse), A321542 (triple and sort up), A321541 (triple and sort down).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a000079 = (2 ^)
    a000079_list = iterate (* 2) 1
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 22 2014, Mar 05 2012, Dec 29 2011
    
  • Magma
    [2^n: n in [0..40]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Feb 17 2014
    
  • Magma
    [n le 2 select n else 5*Self(n-1)-6*Self(n-2): n in [1..40]]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Feb 17 2014
    
  • Maple
    A000079 := n->2^n; [ seq(2^n,n=0..50) ];
    isA000079 := proc(n)
        local fs;
        fs := numtheory[factorset](n) ;
        if n = 1 then
            true ;
        elif nops(fs) <> 1 then
            false;
        elif op(1,fs) = 2 then
            true;
        else
            false ;
        end if;
    end proc: # R. J. Mathar, Jan 09 2017
  • Mathematica
    Table[2^n, {n, 0, 50}]
    2^Range[0, 50] (* Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 14 2014 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{2}, {2}, {0, 20}] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[1/(1 - 2 x), {x, 0, 20}], x] (* Eric W. Weisstein, Sep 21 2017 *)
    NestList[2# &, 1, 40] (* Harvey P. Dale, Oct 07 2019 *)
  • Maxima
    A000079(n):=2^n$ makelist(A000079(n),n,0,30); /* Martin Ettl, Nov 05 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    A000079(n)=2^n \\ Edited by M. F. Hasler, Aug 27 2014
    
  • PARI
    unimodal(n)=local(x,d,um,umc); umc=0; for (c=0,n!-1, x=numtoperm(n,c); d=0; um=1; for (j=2,n,if (x[j]x[j-1] && d==1,um=0); if (um==0,break)); if (um==1,print(x)); umc+=um); umc
    
  • Python
    def a(n): return 1<Michael S. Branicky, Jul 28 2022
    
  • Python
    def is_powerof2(n) -> bool: return n and (n & (n - 1)) == 0  # Peter Luschny, Apr 10 2025
  • Scala
    (List.fill(20)(2: BigInt)).scanLeft(1: BigInt)( * ) // Alonso del Arte, Jan 16 2020
    
  • Scheme
    (define (A000079 n) (expt 2 n)) ;; Antti Karttunen, Mar 21 2017
    

Formula

a(n) = 2^n.
a(0) = 1; a(n) = 2*a(n-1).
G.f.: 1/(1 - 2*x).
E.g.f.: exp(2*x).
a(n)= Sum_{k = 0..n} binomial(n, k).
a(n) is the number of occurrences of n in A000523. a(n) = A001045(n) + A001045(n+1). a(n) = 1 + Sum_{k = 0..(n - 1)} a(k). The Hankel transform of this sequence gives A000007 = [1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...]. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 25 2004
n such that phi(n) = n/2, for n > 1, where phi is Euler's totient (A000010). - Lekraj Beedassy, Sep 07 2004
a(n + 1) = a(n) XOR 3*a(n) where XOR is the binary exclusive OR operator. - Philippe Deléham, Jun 19 2005
a(n) = StirlingS2(n + 1, 2) + 1. - Ross La Haye, Jan 09 2008
a(n+2) = 6a(n+1) - 8a(n), n = 1, 2, 3, ... with a(1) = 1, a(2) = 2. - Yosu Yurramendi, Aug 06 2008
a(n) = ka(n-1) + (4 - 2k)a(n-2) for any integer k and n > 1, with a(0) = 1, a(1) = 2. - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Dec 05 2008
a(n) = Sum_{l_1 = 0..n + 1} Sum_{l_2 = 0..n}...Sum_{l_i = 0..n - i}...Sum_{l_n = 0..1} delta(l_1, l_2, ..., l_i, ..., l_n) where delta(l_1, l_2, ..., l_i, ..., l_n) = 0 if any l_i <= l_(i+1) and l_(i+1) != 0 and delta(l_1, l_2, ..., l_i, ..., l_n) = 1 otherwise. - Thomas Wieder, Feb 25 2009
a(0) = 1, a(1) = 2; a(n) = a(n-1)^2/a(n-2), n >= 2. - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Sep 22 2009
a(n) = A173786(n, n)/2 = A173787(n + 1, n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 28 2010
If p[i] = i - 1 and if A is the Hessenberg matrix of order n defined by: A[i, j] = p[j - i + 1], (i <= j), A[i, j] = -1, (i = j + 1), and A[i, j] = 0 otherwise. Then, for n >= 1, a(n-1) = det A. - Milan Janjic, May 02 2010
If p[i] = Fibonacci(i-2) and if A is the Hessenberg matrix of order n defined by: A[i, j] = p[j - i + 1], (i <= j), A[i, j] = -1, (i = j + 1), and A[i, j] = 0 otherwise. Then, for n >= 2, a(n-2) = det A. - Milan Janjic, May 08 2010
The sum of reciprocals, 1/1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... + 1/(2^n) + ... = 2. - Mohammad K. Azarian, Dec 29 2010
a(n) = 2*A001045(n) + A078008(n) = 3*A001045(n) + (-1)^n. - Paul Barry, Feb 20 2003
a(n) = A118654(n, 2).
a(n) = A140740(n+1, 1).
a(n) = A131577(n) + A011782(n) = A024495(n) + A131708(n) + A024493(n) = A000749(n) + A038503(n) + A038504(n) + A038505(n) = A139761(n) + A139748(n) + A139714(n) + A133476(n) + A139398(n). - Paul Curtz, Jul 25 2011
a(n) = row sums of A007318. - Susanne Wienand, Oct 21 2011
a(n) = Hypergeometric([-n], [], -1). - Peter Luschny, Nov 01 2011
G.f.: A(x) = B(x)/x, B(x) satisfies B(B(x)) = x/(1 - x)^2. - Vladimir Kruchinin, Nov 10 2011
a(n) = Sum_{k = 0..n} A201730(n, k)*(-1)^k. - Philippe Deléham, Dec 06 2011
2^n = Sum_{k = 1..floor((n+1)/2)} C(n+1, 2k-1). - Dennis P. Walsh, Dec 15 2011
A209229(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 07 2012
A001227(a(n)) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, May 01 2012
Sum_{n >= 1} mobius(n)/a(n) = 0.1020113348178103647430363939318... - R. J. Mathar, Aug 12 2012
E.g.f.: 1 + 2*x/(U(0) - x) where U(k) = 6*k + 1 + x^2/(6*k+3 + x^2/(6*k + 5 + x^2/U(k+1) )); (continued fraction, 3-step). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Dec 04 2012
a(n) = det(|s(i+2,j)|, 1 <= i,j <= n), where s(n,k) are Stirling numbers of the first kind. - Mircea Merca, Apr 04 2013
a(n) = det(|ps(i+1,j)|, 1 <= i,j <= n), where ps(n,k) are Legendre-Stirling numbers of the first kind (A129467). - Mircea Merca, Apr 06 2013
G.f.: W(0), where W(k) = 1 + 2*x*(k+1)/(1 - 2*x*(k+1)/( 2*x*(k+2) + 1/W(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Aug 28 2013
a(n-1) = Sum_{t_1 + 2*t_2 + ... + n*t_n = n} multinomial(t_1 + t_2 + ... + t_n; t_1, t_2, ..., t_n). - Mircea Merca, Dec 06 2013
Construct the power matrix T(n,j) = [A^*j]*[S^*(j-1)] where A(n)=(1,1,1,...) and S(n)=(0,1,0,0,...) (where * is convolution operation). Then a(n-1) = Sum_{j=1..n} T(n,j). - David Neil McGrath, Jan 01 2015
a(n) = A000005(A002110(n)). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, May 23 2016
From Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jul 18 2016: (Start)
Exponential convolution of A000012 with themselves.
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} A011782(k).
Sum_{n>=0} a(n)/n! = exp(2) = A072334.
Sum_{n>=0} (-1)^n*a(n)/n! = exp(-2) = A092553. (End)
G.f.: (r(x) * r(x^2) * r(x^4) * r(x^8) * ...) where r(x) = A090129(x) = (1 + 2x + 2x^2 + 4x^3 + 8x^4 + ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 13 2016
a(n) = A000045(n + 1) + A000045(n) + Sum_{k = 0..n - 2} A000045(k + 1)*2^(n - 2 - k). - Melvin Peralta, Dec 22 2017
a(n) = 7*A077020(n)^2 + A077021(n)^2, n>=3. - Ralf Steiner, Aug 08 2021
a(n)= n + 1 + Sum_{k=3..n+1} (2*k-5)*J(n+2-k), where Jacobsthal number J(n) = A001045(n). - Michael A. Allen, Jan 12 2022
Integral_{x=0..Pi} cos(x)^n*cos(n*x) dx = Pi/a(n) (see Nahin, pp. 69-70). - Stefano Spezia, May 17 2023

Extensions

Clarified a comment T. D. Noe, Aug 30 2009
Edited by Daniel Forgues, May 12 2010
Incorrect comment deleted by Matthew Vandermast, May 17 2014
Comment corrected to match offset by Geoffrey Critzer, Nov 28 2014

A000142 Factorial numbers: n! = 1*2*3*4*...*n (order of symmetric group S_n, number of permutations of n letters).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, 720, 5040, 40320, 362880, 3628800, 39916800, 479001600, 6227020800, 87178291200, 1307674368000, 20922789888000, 355687428096000, 6402373705728000, 121645100408832000, 2432902008176640000, 51090942171709440000, 1124000727777607680000
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

The earliest publication that discusses this sequence appears to be the Sepher Yezirah [Book of Creation], circa AD 300. (See Knuth, also the Zeilberger link.) - N. J. A. Sloane, Apr 07 2014
For n >= 1, a(n) is the number of n X n (0,1) matrices with each row and column containing exactly one entry equal to 1.
This sequence is the BinomialMean transform of A000354. (See A075271 for definition.) - John W. Layman, Sep 12 2002 [This is easily verified from the Paul Barry formula for A000354, by interchanging summations and using the formula: Sum_k (-1)^k C(n-i, k) = KroneckerDelta(i,n). - David Callan, Aug 31 2003]
Number of distinct subsets of T(n-1) elements with 1 element A, 2 elements B, ..., n - 1 elements X (e.g., at n = 5, we consider the distinct subsets of ABBCCCDDDD and there are 5! = 120). - Jon Perry, Jun 12 2003
n! is the smallest number with that prime signature. E.g., 720 = 2^4 * 3^2 * 5. - Amarnath Murthy, Jul 01 2003
a(n) is the permanent of the n X n matrix M with M(i, j) = 1. - Philippe Deléham, Dec 15 2003
Given n objects of distinct sizes (e.g., areas, volumes) such that each object is sufficiently large to simultaneously contain all previous objects, then n! is the total number of essentially different arrangements using all n objects. Arbitrary levels of nesting of objects are permitted within arrangements. (This application of the sequence was inspired by considering leftover moving boxes.) If the restriction exists that each object is able or permitted to contain at most one smaller (but possibly nested) object at a time, the resulting sequence begins 1,2,5,15,52 (Bell Numbers?). Sets of nested wooden boxes or traditional nested Russian dolls come to mind here. - Rick L. Shepherd, Jan 14 2004
From Michael Somos, Mar 04 2004; edited by M. F. Hasler, Jan 02 2015: (Start)
Stirling transform of [2, 2, 6, 24, 120, ...] is A052856 = [2, 2, 4, 14, 76, ...].
Stirling transform of [1, 2, 6, 24, 120, ...] is A000670 = [1, 3, 13, 75, ...].
Stirling transform of [0, 2, 6, 24, 120, ...] is A052875 = [0, 2, 12, 74, ...].
Stirling transform of [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, ...] is A000629 = [1, 2, 6, 26, ...].
Stirling transform of [0, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, ...] is A002050 = [0, 1, 5, 25, 140, ...].
Stirling transform of (A165326*A089064)(1...) = [1, 0, 1, -1, 8, -26, 194, ...] is [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, ...] (this sequence). (End)
First Eulerian transform of 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1... The first Eulerian transform transforms a sequence s to a sequence t by the formula t(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} e(n, k)s(k), where e(n, k) is a first-order Eulerian number [A008292]. - Ross La Haye, Feb 13 2005
Conjecturally, 1, 6, and 120 are the only numbers which are both triangular and factorial. - Christopher M. Tomaszewski (cmt1288(AT)comcast.net), Mar 30 2005
n! is the n-th finite difference of consecutive n-th powers. E.g., for n = 3, [0, 1, 8, 27, 64, ...] -> [1, 7, 19, 37, ...] -> [6, 12, 18, ...] -> [6, 6, ...]. - Bryan Jacobs (bryanjj(AT)gmail.com), Mar 31 2005
a(n+1) = (n+1)! = 1, 2, 6, ... has e.g.f. 1/(1-x)^2. - Paul Barry, Apr 22 2005
Write numbers 1 to n on a circle. Then a(n) = sum of the products of all n - 2 adjacent numbers. E.g., a(5) = 1*2*3 + 2*3*4 + 3*4*5 + 4*5*1 +5*1*2 = 120. - Amarnath Murthy, Jul 10 2005
The number of chains of maximal length in the power set of {1, 2, ..., n} ordered by the subset relation. - Rick L. Shepherd, Feb 05 2006
The number of circular permutations of n letters for n >= 0 is 1, 1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, 720, 5040, 40320, ... - Xavier Noria (fxn(AT)hashref.com), Jun 04 2006
a(n) is the number of deco polyominoes of height n (n >= 1; see definitions in the Barcucci et al. references). - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 07 2006
a(n) is the number of partition tableaux of size n. See Steingrimsson/Williams link for the definition. - David Callan, Oct 06 2006
Consider the n! permutations of the integer sequence [n] = 1, 2, ..., n. The i-th permutation consists of ncycle(i) permutation cycles. Then, if the Sum_{i=1..n!} 2^ncycle(i) runs from 1 to n!, we have Sum_{i=1..n!} 2^ncycle(i) = (n+1)!. E.g., for n = 3 we have ncycle(1) = 3, ncycle(2) = 2, ncycle(3) = 1, ncycle(4) = 2, ncycle(5) = 1, ncycle(6) = 2 and 2^3 + 2^2 + 2^1 + 2^2 + 2^1 + 2^2 = 8 + 4 + 2 + 4 + 2 + 4 = 24 = (n+1)!. - Thomas Wieder, Oct 11 2006
a(n) is the number of set partitions of {1, 2, ..., 2n - 1, 2n} into blocks of size 2 (perfect matchings) in which each block consists of one even and one odd integer. For example, a(3) = 6 counts 12-34-56, 12-36-45, 14-23-56, 14-25-36, 16-23-45, 16-25-34. - David Callan, Mar 30 2007
Consider the multiset M = [1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, ...] = [1, 2, 2, ..., n x 'n'] and form the set U (where U is a set in the strict sense) of all subsets N (where N may be a multiset again) of M. Then the number of elements |U| of U is equal to (n+1)!. E.g. for M = [1, 2, 2] we get U = [[], [2], [2, 2], [1], [1, 2], [1, 2, 2]] and |U| = 3! = 6. This observation is a more formal version of the comment given already by Rick L. Shepherd, Jan 14 2004. - Thomas Wieder, Nov 27 2007
For n >= 1, a(n) = 1, 2, 6, 24, ... are the positions corresponding to the 1's in decimal expansion of Liouville's constant (A012245). - Paul Muljadi, Apr 15 2008
Triangle A144107 has n! for row sums (given n > 0) with right border n! and left border A003319, the INVERTi transform of (1, 2, 6, 24, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 11 2008
Equals INVERT transform of A052186 and row sums of triangle A144108. - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 11 2008
From Abdullahi Umar, Oct 12 2008: (Start)
a(n) is also the number of order-decreasing full transformations (of an n-chain).
a(n-1) is also the number of nilpotent order-decreasing full transformations (of an n-chain). (End)
n! is also the number of optimal broadcast schemes in the complete graph K_{n}, equivalent to the number of binomial trees embedded in K_{n} (see Calin D. Morosan, Information Processing Letters, 100 (2006), 188-193). - Calin D. Morosan (cd_moros(AT)alumni.concordia.ca), Nov 28 2008
Let S_{n} denote the n-star graph. The S_{n} structure consists of n S_{n-1} structures. This sequence gives the number of edges between the vertices of any two specified S_{n+1} structures in S_{n+2} (n >= 1). - K.V.Iyer, Mar 18 2009
Chromatic invariant of the sun graph S_{n-2}.
It appears that a(n+1) is the inverse binomial transform of A000255. - Timothy Hopper, Aug 20 2009
a(n) is also the determinant of a square matrix, An, whose coefficients are the reciprocals of beta function: a{i, j} = 1/beta(i, j), det(An) = n!. - Enrique Pérez Herrero, Sep 21 2009
The asymptotic expansions of the exponential integrals E(x, m = 1, n = 1) ~ exp(-x)/x*(1 - 1/x + 2/x^2 - 6/x^3 + 24/x^4 + ...) and E(x, m = 1, n = 2) ~ exp(-x)/x*(1 - 2/x + 6/x^2 - 24/x^3 + ...) lead to the factorial numbers. See A163931 and A130534 for more information. - Johannes W. Meijer, Oct 20 2009
Satisfies A(x)/A(x^2), A(x) = A173280. - Gary W. Adamson, Feb 14 2010
a(n) = G^n where G is the geometric mean of the first n positive integers. - Jaroslav Krizek, May 28 2010
Increasing colored 1-2 trees with choice of two colors for the rightmost branch of nonleaves. - Wenjin Woan, May 23 2011
Number of necklaces with n labeled beads of 1 color. - Robert G. Wilson v, Sep 22 2011
The sequence 1!, (2!)!, ((3!)!)!, (((4!)!)!)!, ..., ((...(n!)!)...)! (n times) grows too rapidly to have its own entry. See Hofstadter.
The e.g.f. of 1/a(n) = 1/n! is BesselI(0, 2*sqrt(x)). See Abramowitz-Stegun, p. 375, 9.3.10. - Wolfdieter Lang, Jan 09 2012
a(n) is the length of the n-th row which is the sum of n-th row in triangle A170942. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 29 2012
Number of permutations of elements 1, 2, ..., n + 1 with a fixed element belonging to a cycle of length r does not depend on r and equals a(n). - Vladimir Shevelev, May 12 2012
a(n) is the number of fixed points in all permutations of 1, ..., n: in all n! permutations, 1 is first exactly (n-1)! times, 2 is second exactly (n-1)! times, etc., giving (n-1)!*n = n!. - Jon Perry, Dec 20 2012
For n >= 1, a(n-1) is the binomial transform of A000757. See Moreno-Rivera. - Luis Manuel Rivera Martínez, Dec 09 2013
Each term is divisible by its digital root (A010888). - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Apr 14 2014
For m >= 3, a(m-2) is the number hp(m) of acyclic Hamiltonian paths in a simple graph with m vertices, which is complete except for one missing edge. For m < 3, hp(m)=0. - Stanislav Sykora, Jun 17 2014
a(n) is the number of increasing forests with n nodes. - Brad R. Jones, Dec 01 2014
The factorial numbers can be calculated by means of the recurrence n! = (floor(n/2)!)^2 * sf(n) where sf(n) are the swinging factorials A056040. This leads to an efficient algorithm if sf(n) is computed via prime factorization. For an exposition of this algorithm see the link below. - Peter Luschny, Nov 05 2016
Treeshelves are ordered (plane) binary (0-1-2) increasing trees where the nodes of outdegree 1 come in 2 colors. There are n! treeshelves of size n, and classical Françon's bijection maps bijectively treeshelves into permutations. - Sergey Kirgizov, Dec 26 2016
Satisfies Benford's law [Diaconis, 1977; Berger-Hill, 2017] - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 07 2017
a(n) = Sum((d_p)^2), where d_p is the number of standard tableaux in the Ferrers board of the integer partition p and summation is over all integer partitions p of n. Example: a(3) = 6. Indeed, the partitions of 3 are [3], [2,1], and [1,1,1], having 1, 2, and 1 standard tableaux, respectively; we have 1^2 + 2^2 + 1^2 = 6. - Emeric Deutsch, Aug 07 2017
a(n) is the n-th derivative of x^n. - Iain Fox, Nov 19 2017
a(n) is the number of maximum chains in the n-dimensional Boolean cube {0,1}^n in respect to the relation "precedes". It is defined as follows: for arbitrary vectors u, v of {0,1}^n, such that u = (u_1, u_2, ..., u_n) and v = (v_1, v_2, ..., v_n), "u precedes v" if u_i <= v_i, for i=1, 2, ..., n. - Valentin Bakoev, Nov 20 2017
a(n) is the number of shortest paths (for example, obtained by Breadth First Search) between the nodes (0,0,...,0) (i.e., the all-zeros vector) and (1,1,...,1) (i.e., the all-ones vector) in the graph H_n, corresponding to the n-dimensional Boolean cube {0,1}^n. The graph is defined as H_n = (V_n, E_n), where V_n is the set of all vectors of {0,1}^n, and E_n contains edges formed by each pair adjacent vectors. - Valentin Bakoev, Nov 20 2017
a(n) is also the determinant of the symmetric n X n matrix M defined by M(i,j) = sigma(gcd(i,j)) for 1 <= i,j <= n. - Bernard Schott, Dec 05 2018
a(n) is also the number of inversion sequences of length n. A length n inversion sequence e_1, e_2, ..., e_n is a sequence of n integers such that 0 <= e_i < i. - Juan S. Auli, Oct 14 2019
The term "factorial" ("factorielle" in French) was coined by the French mathematician Louis François Antoine Arbogast (1759-1803) in 1800. The notation "!" was first used by the French mathematician Christian Kramp (1760-1826) in 1808. - Amiram Eldar, Apr 16 2021
Also the number of signotopes of rank 2, i.e., mappings X:{{1..n} choose 2}->{+,-} such that for any three indices a < b < c, the sequence X(a,b), X(a,c), X(b,c) changes its sign at most once (see Felsner-Weil reference). - Manfred Scheucher, Feb 09 2022
a(n) is also the number of labeled commutative semisimple rings with n elements. As an example the only commutative semisimple rings with 4 elements are F_4 and F_2 X F_2. They both have exactly 2 automorphisms, hence a(4)=24/2+24/2=24. - Paul Laubie, Mar 05 2024
a(n) is the number of extremely unlucky Stirling permutations of order n+1; i.e., the number of Stirling permutations of order n+1 that have exactly one lucky car. - Bridget Tenner, Apr 09 2024

Examples

			There are 3! = 1*2*3 = 6 ways to arrange 3 letters {a, b, c}, namely abc, acb, bac, bca, cab, cba.
Let n = 2. Consider permutations of {1, 2, 3}. Fix element 3. There are a(2) = 2 permutations in each of the following cases: (a) 3 belongs to a cycle of length 1 (permutations (1, 2, 3) and (2, 1, 3)); (b) 3 belongs to a cycle of length 2 (permutations (3, 2, 1) and (1, 3, 2)); (c) 3 belongs to a cycle of length 3 (permutations (2, 3, 1) and (3, 1, 2)). - _Vladimir Shevelev_, May 13 2012
G.f. = 1 + x + 2*x^2 + 6*x^3 + 24*x^4 + 120*x^5 + 720*x^6 + 5040*x^7 + ...
		

References

  • M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds., Handbook of Mathematical Functions, National Bureau of Standards Applied Math. Series 55, 1964 (and various reprintings), p. 833.
  • A. T. Benjamin and J. J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A. 2003, id. 125; also p. 90, ex. 3.
  • Florian Cajori, A History of Mathematical Notations, Dover edition (2012), pars. 448-449.
  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 64-66.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §4.1 Symbols Galore, p. 106.
  • Douglas R. Hofstadter, Fluid concepts & creative analogies: computer models of the fundamental mechanisms of thought, Basic Books, 1995, pages 44-46.
  • A. N. Khovanskii. The Application of Continued Fractions and Their Generalizations to Problem in Approximation Theory. Groningen: Noordhoff, Netherlands, 1963. See p. 141 (10.19).
  • D. E. Knuth, The Art of Computer Programming, Vol. 3, Section 5.1.2, p. 23. [From N. J. A. Sloane, Apr 07 2014]
  • J.-M. De Koninck and A. Mercier, 1001 Problèmes en Théorie Classique des Nombres, Problème 693 pp. 90, 297, Ellipses Paris 2004.
  • A. P. Prudnikov, Yu. A. Brychkov, and O. I. Marichev, "Integrals and Series", Volume 1: "Elementary Functions", Chapter 4: "Finite Sums", New York, Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, 1986-1992.
  • R. W. Robinson, Counting arrangements of bishops, pp. 198-214 of Combinatorial Mathematics IV (Adelaide 1975), Lect. Notes Math., 560 (1976).
  • Sepher Yezirah [Book of Creation], circa AD 300. See verse 52.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
  • Jerome Spanier and Keith B. Oldham, "Atlas of Functions", Hemisphere Publishing Corp., 1987, chapter 2, pages 19-24.
  • D. Stanton and D. White, Constructive Combinatorics, Springer, 1986; see p. 91.
  • Carlo Suares, Sepher Yetsira, Shambhala Publications, 1976. See verse 52.
  • David Wells, The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers, Penguin Books, 1987, pp. 102.

Crossrefs

Factorial base representation: A007623.
Complement of A063992. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 11 2008
Cf. A053657, A163176. - Jonathan Sondow, Jul 26 2009
Cf. A173280. - Gary W. Adamson, Feb 14 2010
Boustrophedon transforms: A230960, A230961.
Cf. A233589.
Cf. A245334.
A row of the array in A249026.
Cf. A001013 (multiplicative closure).
For factorials with initial digit d (1 <= d <= 9) see A045509, A045510, A045511, A045516, A045517, A045518, A282021, A045519; A045520, A045521, A045522, A045523, A045524, A045525, A045526, A045527, A045528, A045529.

Programs

  • Axiom
    [factorial(n) for n in 0..10]
    
  • GAP
    List([0..22],Factorial); # Muniru A Asiru, Dec 05 2018
    
  • Haskell
    a000142 :: (Enum a, Num a, Integral t) => t -> a
    a000142 n = product [1 .. fromIntegral n]
    a000142_list = 1 : zipWith (*) [1..] a000142_list
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 02 2014, Nov 02 2011, Apr 21 2011
    
  • Julia
    print([factorial(big(n)) for n in 0:28]) # Paul Muljadi, May 01 2024
  • Magma
    a:= func< n | Factorial(n) >; [ a(n) : n in [0..10]];
    
  • Maple
    A000142 := n -> n!; seq(n!,n=0..20);
    spec := [ S, {S=Sequence(Z) }, labeled ]; seq(combstruct[count](spec,size=n), n=0..20);
    # Maple program for computing cycle indices of symmetric groups
    M:=6: f:=array(0..M): f[0]:=1: print(`n= `,0); print(f[0]); f[1]:=x[1]: print(`n= `, 1); print(f[1]); for n from 2 to M do f[n]:=expand((1/n)*add( x[l]*f[n-l],l=1..n)); print(`n= `, n); print(f[n]); od:
    with(combstruct):ZL0:=[S,{S=Set(Cycle(Z,card>0))},labeled]: seq(count(ZL0,size=n),n=0..20); # Zerinvary Lajos, Sep 26 2007
  • Mathematica
    Table[Factorial[n], {n, 0, 20}] (* Stefan Steinerberger, Mar 30 2006 *)
    FoldList[#1 #2 &, 1, Range@ 20] (* Robert G. Wilson v, May 07 2011 *)
    Range[20]! (* Harvey P. Dale, Nov 19 2011 *)
    RecurrenceTable[{a[n] == n*a[n - 1], a[0] == 1}, a, {n, 0, 22}] (* Ray Chandler, Jul 30 2015 *)
  • PARI
    a(n)=prod(i=1, n, i) \\ Felix Fröhlich, Aug 17 2014
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = if(n<0, 0, n!)}; /* Michael Somos, Mar 04 2004 */
    
  • Python
    for i in range(1, 1000):
        y = i
        for j in range(1, i):
           y *= i - j
        print(y, "\n")
    
  • Python
    import math
    for i in range(1, 1000):
        math.factorial(i)
        print("")
    # Ruskin Harding, Feb 22 2013
    
  • Sage
    [factorial(n) for n in (1..22)] # Giuseppe Coppoletta, Dec 05 2014
    
  • Scala
    (1: BigInt).to(24: BigInt).scanLeft(1: BigInt)( * ) // Alonso del Arte, Mar 02 2019
    

Formula

Exp(x) = Sum_{m >= 0} x^m/m!. - Mohammad K. Azarian, Dec 28 2010
Sum_{i=0..n} (-1)^i * i^n * binomial(n, i) = (-1)^n * n!. - Yong Kong (ykong(AT)curagen.com), Dec 26 2000
Sum_{i=0..n} (-1)^i * (n-i)^n * binomial(n, i) = n!. - Peter C. Heinig (algorithms(AT)gmx.de), Apr 10 2007
The sequence trivially satisfies the recurrence a(n+1) = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k) * a(k)*a(n-k). - Robert FERREOL, Dec 05 2009
D-finite with recurrence: a(n) = n*a(n-1), n >= 1. n! ~ sqrt(2*Pi) * n^(n+1/2) / e^n (Stirling's approximation).
a(0) = 1, a(n) = subs(x = 1, (d^n/dx^n)(1/(2-x))), n = 1, 2, ... - Karol A. Penson, Nov 12 2001
E.g.f.: 1/(1-x). - Michael Somos, Mar 04 2004
a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^(n-k)*A000522(k)*binomial(n, k) = Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^(n-k)*(x+k)^n*binomial(n, k). - Philippe Deléham, Jul 08 2004
Binomial transform of A000166. - Ross La Haye, Sep 21 2004
a(n) = Sum_{i=1..n} ((-1)^(i-1) * sum of 1..n taken n - i at a time) - e.g., 4! = (1*2*3 + 1*2*4 + 1*3*4 + 2*3*4) - (1*2 + 1*3 + 1*4 + 2*3 + 2*4 + 3*4) + (1 + 2 + 3 + 4) - 1 = (6 + 8 + 12 + 24) - (2 + 3 + 4 + 6 + 8 + 12) + 10 - 1 = 50 - 35 + 10 - 1 = 24. - Jon Perry, Nov 14 2005
a(n) = (n-1)*(a(n-1) + a(n-2)), n >= 2. - Matthew J. White, Feb 21 2006
1 / a(n) = determinant of matrix whose (i,j) entry is (i+j)!/(i!(j+1)!) for n > 0. This is a matrix with Catalan numbers on the diagonal. - Alexander Adamchuk, Jul 04 2006
Hankel transform of A074664. - Philippe Deléham, Jun 21 2007
For n >= 2, a(n-2) = (-1)^n*Sum_{j=0..n-1} (j+1)*Stirling1(n,j+1). - Milan Janjic, Dec 14 2008
From Paul Barry, Jan 15 2009: (Start)
G.f.: 1/(1-x-x^2/(1-3x-4x^2/(1-5x-9x^2/(1-7x-16x^2/(1-9x-25x^2... (continued fraction), hence Hankel transform is A055209.
G.f. of (n+1)! is 1/(1-2x-2x^2/(1-4x-6x^2/(1-6x-12x^2/(1-8x-20x^2... (continued fraction), hence Hankel transform is A059332. (End)
a(n) = Product_{p prime} p^(Sum_{k > 0} floor(n/p^k)) by Legendre's formula for the highest power of a prime dividing n!. - Jonathan Sondow, Jul 24 2009
a(n) = A053657(n)/A163176(n) for n > 0. - Jonathan Sondow, Jul 26 2009
It appears that a(n) = (1/0!) + (1/1!)*n + (3/2!)*n*(n-1) + (11/3!)*n*(n-1)*(n-2) + ... + (b(n)/n!)*n*(n-1)*...*2*1, where a(n) = (n+1)! and b(n) = A000255. - Timothy Hopper, Aug 12 2009
Sum_{n >= 0} 1/a(n) = e. - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Mar 03 2009
a(n) = a(n-1)^2/a(n-2) + a(n-1), n >= 2. - Jaume Oliver Lafont, Sep 21 2009
a(n) = Gamma(n+1). - Enrique Pérez Herrero, Sep 21 2009
a(n) = A173333(n,1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 19 2010
a(n) = A_{n}(1) where A_{n}(x) are the Eulerian polynomials. - Peter Luschny, Aug 03 2010
a(n) = n*(2*a(n-1) - (n-1)*a(n-2)), n > 1. - Gary Detlefs, Sep 16 2010
1/a(n) = -Sum_{k=1..n+1} (-2)^k*(n+k+2)*a(k)/(a(2*k+1)*a(n+1-k)). - Groux Roland, Dec 08 2010
From Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 21 2011: (Start)
a(n) = Product_{p prime, p <= n} p^(Sum_{i >= 1} floor(n/p^i)).
The infinitary analog of this formula is: a(n) = Product_{q terms of A050376 <= n} q^((n)_q), where (n)_q denotes the number of those numbers <= n for which q is an infinitary divisor (for the definition see comment in A037445). (End)
The terms are the denominators of the expansion of sinh(x) + cosh(x). - Arkadiusz Wesolowski, Feb 03 2012
G.f.: 1 / (1 - x / (1 - x / (1 - 2*x / (1 - 2*x / (1 - 3*x / (1 - 3*x / ... )))))). - Michael Somos, May 12 2012
G.f. 1 + x/(G(0)-x) where G(k) = 1 - (k+1)*x/(1 - x*(k+2)/G(k+1)); (continued fraction, 2-step). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Aug 14 2012
G.f.: W(1,1;-x)/(W(1,1;-x) - x*W(1,2;-x)), where W(a,b,x) = 1 - a*b*x/1! + a*(a+1)*b*(b+1)*x^2/2! - ... + a*(a+1)*...*(a+n-1)*b*(b+1)*...*(b+n-1)*x^n/n! + ...; see [A. N. Khovanskii, p. 141 (10.19)]. - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Aug 15 2012
From Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Dec 26 2012: (Start)
G.f.: A(x) = 1 + x/(G(0) - x) where G(k) = 1 + (k+1)*x - x*(k+2)/G(k+1); (continued fraction).
Let B(x) be the g.f. for A051296, then A(x) = 2 - 1/B(x). (End)
G.f.: 1 + x*(G(0) - 1)/(x-1) where G(k) = 1 - (2*k+1)/(1-x/(x - 1/(1 - (2*k+2)/(1-x/(x - 1/G(k+1) ))))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jan 15 2013
G.f.: 1 + x*(1 - G(0))/(sqrt(x)-x) where G(k) = 1 - (k+1)*sqrt(x)/(1-sqrt(x)/(sqrt(x)-1/G(k+1) )); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jan 25 2013
G.f.: 1 + x/G(0) where G(k) = 1 - x*(k+2)/( 1 - x*(k+1)/G(k+1) ); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Mar 23 2013
a(n) = det(S(i+1, j), 1 <= i, j <=n ), where S(n,k) are Stirling numbers of the second kind. - Mircea Merca, Apr 04 2013
G.f.: G(0)/2, where G(k) = 1 + 1/(1 - x*(k+1)/(x*(k+1) + 1/G(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, May 24 2013
G.f.: 2/G(0), where G(k) = 1 + 1/(1 - 1/(1 - 1/(2*x*(k+1)) + 1/G(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, May 29 2013
G.f.: G(0), where G(k) = 1 + x*(2*k+1)/(1 - x*(2*k+2)/(x*(2*k+2) + 1/G(k+1))); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Jun 07 2013
a(n) = P(n-1, floor(n/2)) * floor(n/2)! * (n - (n-2)*((n+1) mod 2)), where P(n, k) are the k-permutations of n objects, n > 0. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 07 2013
a(n) = a(n-2)*(n-1)^2 + a(n-1), n > 1. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Jun 18 2013
a(n) = a(n-2)*(n^2-1) - a(n-1), n > 1. - Ivan N. Ianakiev, Jun 30 2013
G.f.: 1 + x/Q(0), m=+2, where Q(k) = 1 - 2*x*(2*k+1) - m*x^2*(k+1)*(2*k+1)/( 1 - 2*x*(2*k+2) - m*x^2*(k+1)*(2*k+3)/Q(k+1) ); (continued fraction). - Sergei N. Gladkovskii, Sep 24 2013
a(n) = A245334(n,n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 31 2014
a(n) = Product_{i = 1..n} A014963^floor(n/i) = Product_{i = 1..n} A003418(floor(n/i)). - Matthew Vandermast, Dec 22 2014
a(n) = round(Sum_{k>=1} log(k)^n/k^2), for n>=1, which is related to the n-th derivative of the Riemann zeta function at x=2 as follows: round((-1)^n * zeta^(n)(2)). Also see A073002. - Richard R. Forberg, Dec 30 2014
a(n) ~ Sum_{j>=0} j^n/e^j, where e = A001113. When substituting a generic variable for "e" this infinite sum is related to Eulerian polynomials. See A008292. This approximation of n! is within 0.4% at n = 2. See A255169. Accuracy, as a percentage, improves rapidly for larger n. - Richard R. Forberg, Mar 07 2015
a(n) = Product_{k=1..n} (C(n+1, 2)-C(k, 2))/(2*k-1); see Masanori Ando link. - Michel Marcus, Apr 17 2015
Sum_{n>=0} a(n)/(a(n + 1)*a(n + 2)) = Sum_{n>=0} 1/((n + 2)*(n + 1)^2*a(n)) = 2 - exp(1) - gamma + Ei(1) = 0.5996203229953..., where gamma = A001620, Ei(1) = A091725. - Ilya Gutkovskiy, Nov 01 2016
a(2^n) = 2^(2^n - 1) * 1!! * 3!! * 7!! * ... * (2^n - 1)!!. For example, 16! = 2^15*(1*3)*(1*3*5*7)*(1*3*5*7*9*11*13*15) = 20922789888000. - Peter Bala, Nov 01 2016
a(n) = sum(prod(B)), where the sum is over all subsets B of {1,2,...,n-1} and where prod(B) denotes the product of all the elements of set B. If B is a singleton set with element b, then we define prod(B)=b, and, if B is the empty set, we define prod(B) to be 1. For example, a(4)=(1*2*3)+(1*2)+(1*3)+(2*3)+(1)+(2)+(3)+1=24. - Dennis P. Walsh, Oct 23 2017
Sum_{n >= 0} 1/(a(n)*(n+2)) = 1. - Multiplying the denominator by (n+2) in Jaume Oliver Lafont's entry above creates a telescoping sum. - Fred Daniel Kline, Nov 08 2020
O.g.f.: Sum_{k >= 0} k!*x^k = Sum_{k >= 0} (k+y)^k*x^k/(1 + (k+y)*x)^(k+1) for arbitrary y. - Peter Bala, Mar 21 2022
E.g.f.: 1/(1 + LambertW(-x*exp(-x))) = 1/(1-x), see A258773. -(1/x)*substitute(z = x*exp(-x), z*(d/dz)LambertW(-z)) = 1/(1 - x). See A075513. Proof: Use the compositional inverse (x*exp(-x))^[-1] = -LambertW(-z). See A000169 or A152917, and Richard P. Stanley: Enumerative Combinatorics, vol. 2, p. 37, eq. (5.52). - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 17 2022
Sum_{k >= 1} 1/10^a(k) = A012245 (Liouville constant). - Bernard Schott, Dec 18 2022
From David Ulgenes, Sep 19 2023: (Start)
1/a(n) = (e/(2*Pi*n)*Integral_{x=-oo..oo} cos(x-n*arctan(x))/(1+x^2)^(n/2) dx). Proof: take the real component of Laplace's integral for 1/Gamma(x).
a(n) = Integral_{x=0..1} e^(-t)*LerchPhi(1/e, -n, t) dt. Proof: use the relationship Gamma(x+1) = Sum_{n >= 0} Integral_{t=n..n+1} e^(-t)t^x dt = Sum_{n >= 0} Integral_{t=0..1} e^(-(t+n))(t+n)^x dt and interchange the order of summation and integration.
Conjecture: a(n) = 1/(2*Pi)*Integral_{x=-oo..oo}(n+i*x+1)!/(i*x+1)-(n+i*x-1)!/(i*x-1)dx. (End)
a(n) = floor(b(n)^n / (floor(((2^b(n) + 1) / 2^n)^b(n)) mod 2^b(n))), where b(n) = (n + 1)^(n + 2) = A007778(n+1). Joint work with Mihai Prunescu. - Lorenzo Sauras Altuzarra, Oct 18 2023
a(n) = e^(Integral_{x=1..n+1} Psi(x) dx) where Psi(x) is the digamma function. - Andrea Pinos, Jan 10 2024
a(n) = Integral_{x=0..oo} e^(-x^(1/n)) dx, for n > 0. - Ridouane Oudra, Apr 20 2024
O.g.f.: N(x) = hypergeometric([1,1], [], x) = LaplaceTransform(x/(1-x))/x, satisfying x^2*N'(x) + (x-1)*N(x) + 1 = 0, with N(0) = 1. - Wolfdieter Lang, May 31 2025

A156552 Unary-encoded compressed factorization of natural numbers.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 7, 6, 9, 16, 11, 32, 17, 10, 15, 64, 13, 128, 19, 18, 33, 256, 23, 12, 65, 14, 35, 512, 21, 1024, 31, 34, 129, 20, 27, 2048, 257, 66, 39, 4096, 37, 8192, 67, 22, 513, 16384, 47, 24, 25, 130, 131, 32768, 29, 36, 71, 258, 1025, 65536, 43, 131072, 2049, 38, 63, 68, 69, 262144
Offset: 1

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Author

Leonid Broukhis, Feb 09 2009

Keywords

Comments

The primes become the powers of 2 (2 -> 1, 3 -> 2, 5 -> 4, 7 -> 8); the composite numbers are formed by taking the values for the factors in the increasing order, multiplying them by the consecutive powers of 2, and summing. See the Example section.
From Antti Karttunen, Jun 27 2014: (Start)
The odd bisection (containing even terms) halved gives A244153.
The even bisection (containing odd terms), when one is subtracted from each and halved, gives this sequence back.
(End)
Question: Are there any other solutions that would satisfy the recurrence r(1) = 0; and for n > 1, r(n) = Sum_{d|n, d>1} 2^A033265(r(d)), apart from simple variants 2^k * A156552(n)? See also A297112, A297113. - Antti Karttunen, Dec 30 2017

Examples

			For 84 = 2*2*3*7 -> 1*1 + 1*2 + 2*4 + 8*8 =  75.
For 105 = 3*5*7 -> 2*1 + 4*2 + 8*4 = 42.
For 137 = p_33 -> 2^32 = 4294967296.
For 420 = 2*2*3*5*7 -> 1*1 + 1*2 + 2*4 + 4*8 + 8*16 = 171.
For 147 = 3*7*7 = p_2 * p_4 * p_4 -> 2*1 + 8*2 + 8*4 = 50.
		

Crossrefs

One less than A005941.
Inverse permutation: A005940 with starting offset 0 instead of 1.
Cf. also A297106, A297112 (Möbius transform), A297113, A153013, A290308, A300827, A323243, A323244, A323247, A324201, A324812 (n for which a(n) is a square), A324813, A324822, A324823, A324398, A324713, A324815, A324819, A324865, A324866, A324867.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Floor@ Total@ Flatten@ MapIndexed[#1 2^(#2 - 1) &, Flatten[ Table[2^(PrimePi@ #1 - 1), {#2}] & @@@ FactorInteger@ n]], {n, 67}] (* Michael De Vlieger, Sep 08 2016 *)
  • PARI
    a(n) = {my(f = factor(n), p2 = 1, res = 0); for(i = 1, #f~, p = 1 << (primepi(f[i, 1]) - 1); res += (p * p2 * (2^(f[i, 2]) - 1)); p2 <<= f[i, 2]); res}; \\ David A. Corneth, Mar 08 2019
    
  • PARI
    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)};
    A156552(n) = if(1==n, 0, if(!(n%2), 1+(2*A156552(n/2)), 2*A156552(A064989(n)))); \\ (based on the given recurrence) - Antti Karttunen, Mar 08 2019
    
  • Perl
    # Program corrected per instructions from Leonid Broukhis. - Antti Karttunen, Jun 26 2014
    # However, it gives correct answers only up to n=136, before corruption by a wrap-around effect.
    # Note that the correct answer for n=137 is A156552(137) = 4294967296.
    $max = $ARGV[0];
    $pow = 0;
    foreach $i (2..$max) {
    @a = split(/ /, `factor $i`);
    shift @a;
    $shift = 0;
    $cur = 0;
    while ($n = int shift @a) {
    $prime{$n} = 1 << $pow++ if !defined($prime{$n});
    $cur |= $prime{$n} << $shift++;
    }
    print "$cur, ";
    }
    print "\n";
    (Scheme, with memoization-macro definec from Antti Karttunen's IntSeq-library, two different implementations)
    (definec (A156552 n) (cond ((= n 1) 0) (else (+ (A000079 (+ -2 (A001222 n) (A061395 n))) (A156552 (A052126 n))))))
    (definec (A156552 n) (cond ((= 1 n) (- n 1)) ((even? n) (+ 1 (* 2 (A156552 (/ n 2))))) (else (* 2 (A156552 (A064989 n))))))
    ;; Antti Karttunen, Jun 26 2014
    
  • Python
    from sympy import primepi, factorint
    def A156552(n): return sum((1<Chai Wah Wu, Mar 10 2023

Formula

From Antti Karttunen, Jun 26 2014: (Start)
a(1) = 0, a(n) = A000079(A001222(n)+A061395(n)-2) + a(A052126(n)).
a(1) = 0, a(2n) = 1+2*a(n), a(2n+1) = 2*a(A064989(2n+1)). [Compare to the entanglement recurrence A243071].
For n >= 0, a(2n+1) = 2*A244153(n+1). [Follows from the latter clause of the above formula.]
a(n) = A005941(n) - 1.
As a composition of related permutations:
a(n) = A003188(A243354(n)).
a(n) = A054429(A243071(n)).
For all n >= 1, A005940(1+a(n)) = n and for all n >= 0, a(A005940(n+1)) = n. [The offset-0 version of A005940 works as an inverse for this permutation.]
This permutations also maps between the partition-lists A112798 and A125106:
A056239(n) = A161511(a(n)). [The sums of parts of each partition (the total sizes).]
A003963(n) = A243499(a(n)). [And also the products of those parts.]
(End)
From Antti Karttunen, Oct 09 2016: (Start)
A161511(a(n)) = A056239(n).
A029837(1+a(n)) = A252464(n). [Binary width of terms.]
A080791(a(n)) = A252735(n). [Number of nonleading 0-bits.]
A000120(a(n)) = A001222(n). [Binary weight.]
For all n >= 2, A001511(a(n)) = A055396(n).
For all n >= 2, A000120(a(n))-1 = A252736(n). [Binary weight minus one.]
A252750(a(n)) = A252748(n).
a(A250246(n)) = A252754(n).
a(A005117(n)) = A277010(n). [Maps squarefree numbers to a permutation of A003714, fibbinary numbers.]
A085357(a(n)) = A008966(n). [Ditto for their characteristic functions.]
For all n >= 0:
a(A276076(n)) = A277012(n).
a(A276086(n)) = A277022(n).
a(A260443(n)) = A277020(n).
(End)
From Antti Karttunen, Dec 30 2017: (Start)
For n > 1, a(n) = Sum_{d|n, d>1} 2^A033265(a(d)). [See comments.]
More linking formulas:
A106737(a(n)) = A000005(n).
A290077(a(n)) = A000010(n).
A069010(a(n)) = A001221(n).
A136277(a(n)) = A181591(n).
A132971(a(n)) = A008683(n).
A106400(a(n)) = A008836(n).
A268411(a(n)) = A092248(n).
A037011(a(n)) = A010052(n) [conjectured, depends on the exact definition of A037011].
A278161(a(n)) = A046951(n).
A001316(a(n)) = A061142(n).
A277561(a(n)) = A034444(n).
A286575(a(n)) = A037445(n).
A246029(a(n)) = A181819(n).
A278159(a(n)) = A124859(n).
A246660(a(n)) = A112624(n).
A246596(a(n)) = A069739(n).
A295896(a(n)) = A053866(n).
A295875(a(n)) = A295297(n).
A284569(a(n)) = A072411(n).
A286574(a(n)) = A064547(n).
A048735(a(n)) = A292380(n).
A292272(a(n)) = A292382(n).
A244154(a(n)) = A048673(n), a(A064216(n)) = A244153(n).
A279344(a(n)) = A279339(n), a(A279338(n)) = A279343(n).
a(A277324(n)) = A277189(n).
A037800(a(n)) = A297155(n).
For n > 1, A033265(a(n)) = 1+A297113(n).
(End)
From Antti Karttunen, Mar 08 2019: (Start)
a(n) = A048675(n) + A323905(n).
a(A324201(n)) = A000396(n), provided there are no odd perfect numbers.
The following sequences are derived from or related to the base-2 expansion of a(n):
A000265(a(n)) = A322993(n).
A002487(a(n)) = A323902(n).
A005187(a(n)) = A323247(n).
A324288(a(n)) = A324116(n).
A323505(a(n)) = A323508(n).
A079559(a(n)) = A323512(n).
A085405(a(n)) = A323239(n).
The following sequences are obtained by applying to a(n) a function that depends on the prime factorization of its argument, which goes "against the grain" because a(n) is the binary code of the factorization of n, which in these cases is then factored again:
A000203(a(n)) = A323243(n).
A033879(a(n)) = A323244(n) = 2*a(n) - A323243(n),
A294898(a(n)) = A323248(n).
A000005(a(n)) = A324105(n).
A000010(a(n)) = A324104(n).
A083254(a(n)) = A324103(n).
A001227(a(n)) = A324117(n).
A000593(a(n)) = A324118(n).
A001221(a(n)) = A324119(n).
A009194(a(n)) = A324396(n).
A318458(a(n)) = A324398(n).
A192895(a(n)) = A324100(n).
A106315(a(n)) = A324051(n).
A010052(a(n)) = A324822(n).
A053866(a(n)) = A324823(n).
A001065(a(n)) = A324865(n) = A323243(n) - a(n),
A318456(a(n)) = A324866(n) = A324865(n) OR a(n),
A318457(a(n)) = A324867(n) = A324865(n) XOR a(n),
A318458(a(n)) = A324398(n) = A324865(n) AND a(n),
A318466(a(n)) = A324819(n) = A323243(n) OR 2*a(n),
A318467(a(n)) = A324713(n) = A323243(n) XOR 2*a(n),
A318468(a(n)) = A324815(n) = A323243(n) AND 2*a(n).
(End)

Extensions

More terms from Antti Karttunen, Jun 28 2014

A001316 Gould's sequence: a(n) = Sum_{k=0..n} (binomial(n,k) mod 2); number of odd entries in row n of Pascal's triangle (A007318); a(n) = 2^A000120(n).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 2, 4, 2, 4, 4, 8, 2, 4, 4, 8, 4, 8, 8, 16, 2, 4, 4, 8, 4, 8, 8, 16, 4, 8, 8, 16, 8, 16, 16, 32, 2, 4, 4, 8, 4, 8, 8, 16, 4, 8, 8, 16, 8, 16, 16, 32, 4, 8, 8, 16, 8, 16, 16, 32, 8, 16, 16, 32, 16, 32, 32, 64, 2, 4, 4, 8, 4, 8, 8, 16, 4, 8, 8, 16, 8, 16, 16, 32, 4, 8, 8, 16, 8, 16, 16, 32
Offset: 0

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Author

Keywords

Comments

Also called Dress's sequence.
This sequence might be better called Glaisher's sequence, since James Glaisher showed that odd binomial coefficients are counted by 2^A000120(n) in 1899. - Eric Rowland, Mar 17 2017 [However, the name "Gould's sequence" is deeply entrenched in the literature. - N. J. A. Sloane, Mar 17 2017] [Named after the American mathematician Henry Wadsworth Gould (b. 1928). - Amiram Eldar, Jun 19 2021]
All terms are powers of 2. The first occurrence of 2^k is at n = 2^k - 1; e.g., the first occurrence of 16 is at n = 15. - Robert G. Wilson v, Dec 06 2000
a(n) is the highest power of 2 dividing binomial(2n,n) = A000984(n). - Benoit Cloitre, Jan 23 2002
Also number of 1's in n-th row of triangle in A070886. - Hans Havermann, May 26 2002. Equivalently, number of live cells in generation n of a one-dimensional cellular automaton, Rule 90, starting with a single live cell. - Ben Branman, Feb 28 2009. Ditto for Rule 18. - N. J. A. Sloane, Aug 09 2014. This is also the odd-rule cellular automaton defined by OddRule 003 (see Ekhad-Sloane-Zeilberger "Odd-Rule Cellular Automata on the Square Grid" link). - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 25 2015
Also number of numbers k, 0<=k<=n, such that (k OR n) = n (bitwise logical OR): a(n) = #{k : T(n,k)=n, 0<=k<=n}, where T is defined as in A080098. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jan 28 2003
To construct the sequence, start with 1 and use the rule: If k >= 0 and a(0),a(1),...,a(2^k-1) are the first 2^k terms, then the next 2^k terms are 2*a(0),2*a(1),...,2*a(2^k-1). - Benoit Cloitre, Jan 30 2003
Also, numerator((2^k)/k!). - Mohammed Bouayoun (mohammed.bouayoun(AT)sanef.com), Mar 03 2004
The odd entries in Pascal's triangle form the Sierpiński Gasket (a fractal). - Amarnath Murthy, Nov 20 2004
Row sums of Sierpiński's Gasket A047999. - Johannes W. Meijer, Jun 05 2011
Fixed point of the morphism "1" -> "1,2", "2" -> "2,4", "4" -> "4,8", ..., "2^k" -> "2^k,2^(k+1)", ... starting with a(0) = 1; 1 -> 12 -> 1224 -> = 12242448 -> 122424482448488(16) -> ... . - Philippe Deléham, Jun 18 2005
a(n) = number of 1's of stage n of the one-dimensional cellular automaton with Rule 90. - Andras Erszegi (erszegi.andras(AT)chello.hu), Apr 01 2006
a(33)..a(63) = A117973(1)..A117973(31). - Stephen Crowley, Mar 21 2007
Or the number of solutions of the equation: A000120(x) + A000120(n-x) = A000120(n). - Vladimir Shevelev, Jul 19 2009
For positive n, a(n) equals the denominator of the permanent of the n X n matrix consisting entirely of (1/2)'s. - John M. Campbell, May 26 2011
Companions to A001316 are A048896, A105321, A117973, A151930 and A191488. They all have the same structure. We observe that for all these sequences a((2*n+1)*2^p-1) = C(p)*A001316(n), p >= 0. If C(p) = 2^p then a(n) = A001316(n), if C(p) = 1 then a(n) = A048896(n), if C(p) = 2^p+2 then a(n) = A105321(n+1), if C(p) = 2^(p+1) then a(n) = A117973(n), if C(p) = 2^p-2 then a(n) = (-1)*A151930(n) and if C(p) = 2^(p+1)+2 then a(n) = A191488(n). Furthermore for all a(2^p - 1) = C(p). - Johannes W. Meijer, Jun 05 2011
a(n) = number of zeros in n-th row of A219463 = number of ones in n-th row of A047999. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 30 2012
This is the Run Length Transform of S(n) = {1,2,4,8,16,...} (cf. A000079). The Run Length Transform of a sequence {S(n), n>=0} is defined to be the sequence {T(n), n>=0} given by T(n) = Product_i S(i), where i runs through the lengths of runs of 1's in the binary expansion of n. E.g., 19 is 10011 in binary, which has two runs of 1's, of lengths 1 and 2. So T(19) = S(1)*S(2). T(0)=1 (the empty product). - N. J. A. Sloane, Sep 05 2014
A105321(n+1) = a(n+1) + a(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 14 2014
a(n) = A261363(n,n) = number of distinct terms in row n of A261363 = number of odd terms in row n+1 of A261363. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 16 2015
From Gary W. Adamson, Aug 26 2016: (Start)
A production matrix for the sequence is lim_{k->infinity} M^k, the left-shifted vector of M:
1, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...
2, 0, 0, 0, 0, ...
0, 1, 0, 0, 0, ...
0, 2, 0, 0, 0, ...
0, 0, 1, 0, 0, ...
0, 0, 2, 0, 0, ...
0, 0, 0, 1, 0, ...
...
The result is equivalent to the g.f. of Apr 06 2003: Product_{k>=0} (1 + 2*z^(2^k)). (End)
Number of binary palindromes of length n for which the first floor(n/2) symbols are themselves a palindrome (Ji and Wilf 2008). - Jeffrey Shallit, Jun 15 2017

Examples

			Has a natural structure as a triangle:
  1,
  2,
  2,4,
  2,4,4,8,
  2,4,4,8,4,8,8,16,
  2,4,4,8,4,8,8,16,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,
  2,4,4,8,4,8,8,16,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,8,16,16,32,16,32,32,64,
  ...
The rows converge to A117973.
From _Omar E. Pol_, Jun 07 2009: (Start)
Also, triangle begins:
   1;
   2,2;
   4,2,4,4;
   8,2,4,4,8,4,8,8;
  16,2,4,4,8,4,8,8,16,4,8,8,16,8,16,16;
  32,2,4,4,8,4,8,8,16,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,8,16,16,32,16,32,32;
  64,2,4,4,8,4,8,8,16,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,4,8,8,16,8,16,16,32,8,16,16,32,16,32,...
(End)
G.f. = 1 + 2*x + 2*x^2 + 4*x^3 + 2*x^4 + 4*x^5 + 4*x^6 + 8*x^7 + 2*x^8 + ... - _Michael Somos_, Aug 26 2015
		

References

  • Arthur T. Benjamin and Jennifer J. Quinn, Proofs that really count: the art of combinatorial proof, M.A.A., 2003, p. 75ff.
  • Steven R. Finch, Mathematical Constants, Cambridge, 2003, pp. 145-151.
  • James W. L. Glaisher, On the residue of a binomial-theorem coefficient with respect to a prime modulus, Quarterly Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics, Vol. 30 (1899), pp. 150-156.
  • H. W. Gould, Exponential Binomial Coefficient Series. Tech. Rep. 4, Math. Dept., West Virginia Univ., Morgantown, WV, Sep 1961.
  • Olivier Martin, Andrew M. Odlyzko, and Stephen Wolfram, Algebraic properties of cellular automata, Comm. Math. Physics, Vol. 93 (1984), pp. 219-258. Reprinted in Theory and Applications of Cellular Automata, S Wolfram, Ed., World Scientific, 1986, pp. 51-90 and in Cellular Automata and Complexity: Collected Papers of Stephen Wolfram, Addison-Wesley, 1994, pp. 71-113
  • Manfred R. Schroeder, Fractals, Chaos, Power Laws, W. H. Freeman, NY, 1991, page 383.
  • N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
  • N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
  • Andrew Wuensche, Exploring Discrete Dynamics, Luniver Press, 2011. See Fig. 2.3.

Crossrefs

Equals left border of triangle A166548. - Gary W. Adamson, Oct 16 2009
For generating functions Product_{k>=0} (1+a*x^(b^k)) for the following values of (a,b) see: (1,2) A000012 and A000027, (1,3) A039966 and A005836, (1,4) A151666 and A000695, (1,5) A151667 and A033042, (2,2) A001316, (2,3) A151668, (2,4) A151669, (2,5) A151670, (3,2) A048883, (3,3) A117940, (3,4) A151665, (3,5) A151671, (4,2) A102376, (4,3) A151672, (4,4) A151673, (4,5) A151674.
For partial sums see A006046. For first differences see A151930.
This is the numerator of 2^n/n!, while A049606 gives the denominator.
If we subtract 1 from the terms we get a pair of essentially identical sequences, A038573 and A159913.
A163000 and A163577 count binomial coefficients with 2-adic valuation 1 and 2. A275012 gives a measure of complexity of these sequences. - Eric Rowland, Mar 15 2017
Cf. A286575 (run-length transform), A368655 (binomial transform), also A037445.

Programs

  • Haskell
    import Data.List (transpose)
    a001316 = sum . a047999_row  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 24 2012
    a001316_list = 1 : zs where
       zs = 2 : (concat $ transpose [zs, map (* 2) zs])
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 27 2014, Sep 16 2011
    (Sage, Python)
    from functools import cache
    @cache
    def A001316(n):
        if n <= 1: return n+1
        return A001316(n//2) << n%2
    print([A001316(n) for n in range(88)])  # Peter Luschny, Nov 19 2012
    
  • Maple
    A001316 := proc(n) local k; add(binomial(n,k) mod 2, k=0..n); end;
    S:=[1]; S:=[op(S),op(2*s)]; # repeat ad infinitum!
    a := n -> 2^add(i,i=convert(n,base,2)); # Peter Luschny, Mar 11 2009
  • Mathematica
    Table[ Sum[ Mod[ Binomial[n, k], 2], {k, 0, n} ], {n, 0, 100} ]
    Nest[ Join[#, 2#] &, {1}, 7] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jan 24 2006 and modified Jul 27 2014 *)
    Map[Function[Apply[Plus,Flatten[ #1]]], CellularAutomaton[90,{{1},0},100]] (* Produces counts of ON cells. N. J. A. Sloane, Aug 10 2009 *)
    ArrayPlot[CellularAutomaton[90, {{1}, 0}, 20]] (* Illustration of first 20 generations. - N. J. A. Sloane, Aug 14 2014 *)
    Table[2^(RealDigits[n - 1, 2][[1]] // Total), {n, 1, 100}] (* Gabriel C. Benamy, Dec 08 2009 *)
    CoefficientList[Series[Exp[2*x], {x, 0, 100}], x] // Numerator (* Jean-François Alcover, Oct 25 2013 *)
    Count[#,?OddQ]&/@Table[Binomial[n,k],{n,0,90},{k,0,n}] (* _Harvey P. Dale, Sep 22 2015 *)
    2^DigitSum[Range[0, 100], 2] (* Paolo Xausa, Jul 31 2025 *)
  • PARI
    {a(n) = if( n<0, 0, numerator(2^n / n!))};
    
  • PARI
    A001316(n)=1<M. F. Hasler, May 03 2009
    
  • PARI
    a(n)=2^hammingweight(n) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Jan 04 2013
    
  • Python
    def A001316(n):
        return 2**bin(n)[2:].count("1") # Indranil Ghosh, Feb 06 2017
    
  • Python
    def A001316(n): return 1<Karl-Heinz Hofmann, Aug 01 2025
    
  • Python
    import numpy # (version >= 2.0.0)
    n_up_to = 2**22
    A000079 = 1 << numpy.arange(n_up_to.bit_length())
    A001316 = A000079[numpy.bitwise_count(numpy.arange(n_up_to))]
    print(A001316[0:100]) # Karl-Heinz Hofmann, Aug 01 2025
    
  • Scheme
    (define (A001316 n) (let loop ((n n) (z 1)) (cond ((zero? n) z) ((even? n) (loop (/ n 2) z)) (else (loop (/ (- n 1) 2) (* z 2)))))) ;; Antti Karttunen, May 29 2017

Formula

a(n) = 2^A000120(n).
a(0) = 1; for n > 0, write n = 2^i + j where 0 <= j < 2^i; then a(n) = 2*a(j).
a(n) = 2*a(n-1)/A006519(n) = A000079(n)*A049606(n)/A000142(n).
a(n) = A038573(n) + 1.
G.f.: Product_{k>=0} (1+2*z^(2^k)). - Ralf Stephan, Apr 06 2003
a(n) = Sum_{i=0..2*n} (binomial(2*n, i) mod 2)*(-1)^i. - Benoit Cloitre, Nov 16 2003
a(n) mod 3 = A001285(n). - Benoit Cloitre, May 09 2004
a(n) = 2^n - 2*Sum_{k=0..n} floor(binomial(n, k)/2). - Paul Barry, Dec 24 2004
a(n) = Product_{k=0..log_2(n)} 2^b(n, k), b(n, k) = coefficient of 2^k in binary expansion of n. - Paul D. Hanna
Sum_{k=0..n-1} a(k) = A006046(n).
a(n) = n/2 + 1/2 + (1/2)*Sum_{k=0..n} (-(-1)^binomial(n,k)). - Stephen Crowley, Mar 21 2007
G.f. for a(n)/A156769(n): (1/2)*z^(1/2)*sinh(2*z^(1/2)). - Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 20 2009
Equals infinite convolution product of [1,2,0,0,0,0,0,0,0] aerated (A000079 - 1) times, i.e., [1,2,0,0,0,0,0,0,0] * [1,0,2,0,0,0,0,0,0] * [1,0,0,0,2,0,0,0,0]. - Mats Granvik, Gary W. Adamson, Oct 02 2009
a(n) = f(n, 1) with f(x, y) = if x = 0 then y otherwise f(floor(x/2), y*(1 + x mod 2)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 21 2009
a(n) = 2^(number of 1's in binary form of (n-1)). - Gabriel C. Benamy, Dec 08 2009
a((2*n+1)*2^p-1) = (2^p)*a(n), p >= 0. - Johannes W. Meijer, Jun 05 2011
a(n) = A000120(A001317(n)). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 24 2012
a(n) = A226078(n,1). - Reinhard Zumkeller, May 25 2013
a(n) = lcm(n!, 2^n) / n!. - Daniel Suteu, Apr 28 2017
a(n) = A061142(A005940(1+n)). - Antti Karttunen, May 29 2017
a(0) = 1, a(2*n) = a(n), a(2*n+1) = 2*a(n). - Daniele Parisse, Feb 15 2024
a(n*m) <= a(n)^A000120(m). - Joe Amos, Mar 27 2025

Extensions

Additional comments from Henry Bottomley, Mar 12 2001
Further comments from N. J. A. Sloane, May 30 2009

A077610 Triangle in which n-th row lists unitary divisors of n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 1, 2, 3, 6, 1, 7, 1, 8, 1, 9, 1, 2, 5, 10, 1, 11, 1, 3, 4, 12, 1, 13, 1, 2, 7, 14, 1, 3, 5, 15, 1, 16, 1, 17, 1, 2, 9, 18, 1, 19, 1, 4, 5, 20, 1, 3, 7, 21, 1, 2, 11, 22, 1, 23, 1, 3, 8, 24, 1, 25, 1, 2, 13, 26, 1, 27, 1, 4, 7, 28, 1, 29, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 15, 30
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Eric W. Weisstein, Nov 11 2002

Keywords

Comments

n-th row = n-th row of A165430 without repetitions. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 04 2013
Denominators of sequence of all positive rational numbers ordered as follows: let m = p(i(1))^e(i(1))*...*p(i(k))^e(i(k)) be the prime factorization of m. Let S(m) be the vector of rationals p(i(k+1-j))^e(i(k+1-j))/p(i(j))^e(i(j)) for j = 1..k. The sequence (a(n)) is the concatenation of vectors S(m) for m = 1, 2, ...; for numerators see A229994. - Clark Kimberling, Oct 31 2013
The concept of unitary divisors was introduced by the Indian mathematician Ramaswamy S. Vaidyanathaswamy (1894-1960) in 1931. He called them "block factors". The term "unitary divisor" was coined by Cohen (1960). - Amiram Eldar, Mar 09 2024

Examples

			1;
1, 2;
1, 3;
1, 4;
1, 5;
1, 2, 3, 6;
1, 7;
1, 8;
1, 9;
1, 2, 5, 10;
1, 11;
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A037445, A027750, A034444 (row lengths), A034448 (row sums); A206778.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a077610 n k = a077610_row n !! k
    a077610_row n = [d | d <- [1..n], let (n',m) = divMod n d,
                         m == 0, gcd d n' == 1]
    a077610_tabf = map a077610_row [1..]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 12 2012
    
  • Maple
    with(numtheory);
    # returns the number of unitary divisors of n and a list of them, from N. J. A. Sloane, May 01 2013
    f:=proc(n)
    local ct,i,t1,ans;
    ct:=0; ans:=[];
    t1:=divisors(n);
    for i from 1 to nops(t1) do
    d:=t1[i];
    if igcd(d,n/d)=1 then ct:=ct+1; ans:=[op(ans),d]; fi;
    od:
    RETURN([ct,ans]);
    end;
    # Alternatively:
    isUnitary := (n, d) -> igcd(n, d) = d and igcd(n/d, d) = 1:
    aList := n -> select(k -> isUnitary(n, k), [seq(1..n)]): # Peter Luschny, Jun 13 2025
  • Mathematica
    row[n_] := Select[ Divisors[n], GCD[#, n/#] == 1 &]; Table[row[n], {n, 1, 30}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Oct 22 2012 *)
  • PARI
    row(n)=my(f=factor(n),k=#f~); Set(vector(2^k,i, prod(j=1,k, if(bittest(i,j-1),1,f[j,1]^f[j,2]))))
    v=[];for(n=1,20,v=concat(v,row(n)));v \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Sep 02 2015
    
  • PARI
    row(n) = {my(d = divisors(n)); select(x->(gcd(x, n/x)==1), d);} \\ Michel Marcus, Oct 11 2015
    
  • Python
    from math import gcd
    def is_unitary(n, d) -> bool: return gcd(n, d) == d and gcd(n//d, d) == 1
    def aList(n) -> list[int]: return [k for k in range(1, n+1) if is_unitary(n, k)]
    for n in range(1, 31): print(aList(n))  # Peter Luschny, Jun 13 2025

Formula

d is unitary divisor of n <=> gcd(n, d) = d and gcd(n/d, d) = 1. - Peter Luschny, Jun 13 2025

A064547 Sum of binary digits (or count of 1-bits) in the exponents of the prime factorization of n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 2, 1, 3, 1, 2, 2, 2, 1, 3, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 1, 2, 2, 3, 1, 3, 1, 2, 2, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 2, 1, 3, 2, 3, 2, 2, 1, 3, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 3, 1, 2, 2, 3, 1, 3, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 3, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 3, 2, 2, 2, 3, 1, 3, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 3, 1, 2, 2, 2, 1, 3, 1, 3, 3
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Wouter Meeussen, Oct 09 2001

Keywords

Comments

This sequence is different from A058061 for n containing 6th, 8th, ..., k-th powers in its prime decomposition, where k runs through the integers missing from A064548.
For n > 1, n is a product of a(n) distinct members of A050376. - Matthew Vandermast, Jul 13 2004
For n > 1: a(n) = length of n-th row in A213925. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 20 2013
Number of Fermi-Dirac factors of n. - Peter Munn, Dec 27 2019

Examples

			For n = 54, n = 2^1 * 3^3 with exponents (1) and (11) in binary, so a(54) = A000120(1) + A000120(3) = 1 + 2 = 3.
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A000028 (positions of odd terms), A000379 (of even terms).
Cf. A050376 (positions of ones), A268388 (terms larger than ones).
Row lengths of A213925.
A000120, A007814, A028234, A037445, A052331, A064989, A067029, A156552, A223491, A286574 are used in formulas defining this sequence.
Cf. A005117, A058061 (to which A064548 relates), A138302.
Cf. other sequences counting factors of n: A001221, A001222.
Cf. other sequences where a(n) depends only on the prime signature of n: A181819, A267116, A268387.
A003961, A007913, A008833, A059895, A059896, A059897, A225546 are used to express relationship between terms of this sequence.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a064547 1 = 0
    a064547 n = length $ a213925_row n  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 20 2013
    
  • Maple
    expts:=proc(n) local t1,t2,t3,t4,i; if n=1 then RETURN([0]); fi; if isprime(n) then RETURN([1]); fi; t1:=ifactor(n); if nops(factorset(n))=1 then RETURN([op(2,t1)]); fi; t2:=nops(t1); t3:=[]; for i from 1 to t2 do t4:=op(i,t1); if nops(t4) = 1 then t3:=[op(t3),1]; else t3:=[op(t3),op(2,t4)]; fi; od; RETURN(t3); end;
    A000120 := proc(n) local w,m,i; w := 0; m := n; while m > 0 do i := m mod 2; w := w+i; m := (m-i)/2; od; w; end:
    LamMos:= proc(n) local t1,t2,t3,i; t1:=expts(n); add( A000120(t1[i]),i=1..nops(t1)); end; # N. J. A. Sloane, Dec 20 2007
    # alternative Maple program:
    A064547:= proc(n) local F;
    F:= ifactors(n)[2];
    add(convert(convert(f[2],base,2),`+`),f=F)
    end proc:
    map(A064547,[$1..100]); # Robert Israel, May 17 2016
  • Mathematica
    Table[Plus@@(DigitCount[Last/@FactorInteger[k], 2, 1]), {k, 105}]
  • PARI
    a(n) = {my(f = factor(n)[,2]); sum(k=1, #f, hammingweight(f[k]));} \\ Michel Marcus, Feb 10 2016
    
  • Python
    from sympy import factorint
    def wt(n): return bin(n).count("1")
    def a(n):
        f=factorint(n)
        return sum([wt(f[i]) for i in f]) # Indranil Ghosh, May 30 2017
  • Scheme
    ;; uses memoizing-macro definec
    (definec (A064547 n) (cond ((= 1 n) 0) (else (+ (A000120 (A067029 n)) (A064547 (A028234 n))))))
    ;; Antti Karttunen, Feb 09 2016
    
  • Scheme
    ;; uses memoizing-macro definec
    (definec (A064547 n) (if (= 1 n) 0 (+ (A000120 (A007814 n)) (A064547 (A064989 n)))))
    ;; Antti Karttunen, Feb 09 2016
    

Formula

a(m*n) <= a(m)*a(n). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 20 2013
From Antti Karttunen, Feb 09 2016: (Start)
a(1) = 0, and for n > 1, a(n) = A000120(A067029(n)) + a(A028234(n)).
a(1) = 0, and for n > 1, a(n) = A000120(A007814(n)) + a(A064989(n)).
(End)
a(n) = log_2(A037445(n)). - Vladimir Shevelev, May 13 2016
a(n) = A286574(A156552(n)). - Antti Karttunen, May 28 2017
Additive with a(p^e) = A000120(e). - Jianing Song, Jul 28 2018
a(n) = A000120(A052331(n)). - Peter Munn, Aug 26 2019
From Peter Munn, Dec 18 2019: (Start)
a(A000379(n)) mod 2 = 0.
a(A000028(n)) mod 2 = 1.
A001221(n) <= a(n) <= A001222(n).
A001221(n) < a(n) => a(n) < A001222(n).
a(n) = A001222(n) if and only if n is in A005117.
a(n) = A001221(n) if and only if n is in A138302.
a(n^2) = a(n).
a(A003961(n)) = a(n).
a(A225546(n)) = a(n).
a(n) = a(A007913(n)) + a(A008833(n)).
a(A050376(n)) = 1.
a(A059897(n,k)) + 2 * a(A059895(n,k)) = a(n) + a(k).
a(A059896(n,k)) + a(A059895(n,k)) = a(n) + a(k).
Alternative definition: a(1) = 0; a(n * m) = a(n) + 1 for m = A050376(k) > A223491(n).
(End)
Sum_{k=1..n} a(k) ~ n * (log(log(n)) + B + C), where B is Mertens's constant (A077761) and C = Sum_{p prime} f(1/p) = 0.13605447049622836522... (A382294), where f(x) = -x + Sum_{k>=0} x^(2^k)/(1+x^(2^k)). - Amiram Eldar, Sep 28 2023
a(n) << log n/log log n. - Charles R Greathouse IV, Nov 29 2024

A049417 a(n) = isigma(n): sum of infinitary divisors of n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 8, 15, 10, 18, 12, 20, 14, 24, 24, 17, 18, 30, 20, 30, 32, 36, 24, 60, 26, 42, 40, 40, 30, 72, 32, 51, 48, 54, 48, 50, 38, 60, 56, 90, 42, 96, 44, 60, 60, 72, 48, 68, 50, 78, 72, 70, 54, 120, 72, 120, 80, 90, 60, 120, 62, 96, 80, 85, 84, 144, 68, 90
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Yasutoshi Kohmoto, Dec 11 1999

Keywords

Comments

A divisor of n is called infinitary if it is a product of divisors of the form p^{y_a 2^a}, where p^y is a prime power dividing n and sum_a y_a 2^a is the binary representation of y.
This sequence is an infinitary analog of the Dedekind psi function A001615. Indeed, a(n) = Product_{q in Q_n}(q+1) = n*Product_{q in Q_n} (1+1/q), where {q} are terms of A050376 and Q_n is the set of distinct q's whose product is n. - Vladimir Shevelev, Apr 01 2014
1/a(n) is the asymptotic density of numbers that are infinitarily divided by n (i.e., numbers whose set of infinitary divisors includes n). - Amiram Eldar, Jul 23 2025

Examples

			If n = 8: 8 = 2^3 = 2^"11" (writing 3 in binary) so the infinitary divisors are 2^"00" = 1, 2^"01" = 2, 2^"10" = 4 and 2^"11" = 8; so a(8) = 1+2+4+8 = 15.
n = 90 = 2*5*9, where 2, 5, 9 are in A050376; so a(n) = 3*6*10 = 180. - _Vladimir Shevelev_, Feb 19 2011
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A049418 (3-infinitary), A074847 (4-infinitary), A097863 (5-infinitary).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a049417 1 = 1
    a049417 n = product $ zipWith f (a027748_row n) (a124010_row n) where
       f p e = product $ zipWith div
               (map (subtract 1 . (p ^)) $
                    zipWith (*) a000079_list $ map (+ 1) $ a030308_row e)
               (map (subtract 1 . (p ^)) a000079_list)
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 18 2015
    
  • Maple
    isidiv := proc(d, n)
        local n2, d2, p, j;
        if n mod d <> 0 then
            return false;
        end if;
        for p in numtheory[factorset](n) do
            padic[ordp](n,p) ;
            n2 := convert(%, base, 2) ;
            padic[ordp](d,p) ;
            d2 := convert(%, base, 2) ;
            for j from 1 to nops(d2) do
                if op(j, n2) = 0 and op(j, d2) <> 0 then
                    return false;
                end if;
            end do:
        end do;
        return true;
    end proc:
    idivisors := proc(n)
        local a, d;
        a := {} ;
        for d in numtheory[divisors](n) do
            if isidiv(d, n) then
                a := a union {d} ;
            end if;
        end do:
        a ;
    end proc:
    A049417 := proc(n)
        local d;
        add(d, d=idivisors(n)) ;
    end proc:
    seq(A049417(n),n=1..100) ; # R. J. Mathar, Feb 19 2011
  • Mathematica
    bitty[k_] := Union[Flatten[Outer[Plus, Sequence @@ ({0, #1} & ) /@ Union[2^Range[0, Floor[Log[2, k]]]*Reverse[IntegerDigits[k, 2]]]]]]; Table[Plus@@((Times @@ (First[it]^(#1 /. z -> List)) & ) /@ Flatten[Outer[z, Sequence @@ bitty /@ Last[it = Transpose[FactorInteger[k]]], 1]]), {k, 2, 120}]
    (* Second program: *)
    a[n_] := If[n == 1, 1, Sort @ Flatten @ Outer[ Times, Sequence @@ (FactorInteger[n] /. {p_, m_Integer} :> p^Select[Range[0, m], BitOr[m, #] == m &])]] // Total;
    Array[a, 100] (* Jean-François Alcover, Mar 23 2020, after Paul Abbott in A077609 *)
  • PARI
    A049417(n) = {my(b, f=factorint(n)); prod(k=1, #f[,2], b = binary(f[k,2]); prod(j=1, #b, if(b[j], 1+f[k,1]^(2^(#b-j)), 1)))} \\ Andrew Lelechenko, Apr 22 2014
    
  • PARI
    isigma(n)=vecprod([vecprod([f[1]^2^k+1|k<-[0..exponent(f[2])], bittest(f[2],k)])|f<-factor(n)~]) \\ M. F. Hasler, Oct 20 2022
    
  • Python
    from math import prod
    from sympy import factorint
    def A049417(n): return prod(p**(1<Chai Wah Wu, Jul 11 2024

Formula

Multiplicative: If e = Sum_{k >= 0} d_k 2^k (binary representation of e), then a(p^e) = Product_{k >= 0} (p^(2^k*{d_k+1}) - 1)/(p^(2^k) - 1). - Christian G. Bower and Mitch Harris, May 20 2005 [This means there is a factor p^2^k + 1 if d_k = 1, otherwise the factor is 1. - M. F. Hasler, Oct 20 2022]
Let n = Product(q_i) where {q_i} is a set of distinct terms of A050376. Then a(n) = Product(q_i + 1). - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 19 2011
If n is squarefree, then a(n) = A001615(n). - Vladimir Shevelev, Apr 01 2014
a(n) = Sum_{k>=1} A077609(n,k). - R. J. Mathar, Oct 04 2017
a(n) = A126168(n)+n. - R. J. Mathar, Oct 05 2017
Multiplicative with a(p^e) = Product{k >= 0, e_k = 1} p^2^k + 1, where e = Sum e_k 2^k, i.e., e_k is bit k of e. - M. F. Hasler, Oct 20 2022
a(n) = iphi(n^2)/iphi(n), where iphi(n) = A091732(n). - Amiram Eldar, Sep 21 2024

Extensions

More terms from Wouter Meeussen, Sep 02 2001

A077609 Triangle in which n-th row lists infinitary divisors of n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 1, 3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 1, 2, 3, 6, 1, 7, 1, 2, 4, 8, 1, 9, 1, 2, 5, 10, 1, 11, 1, 3, 4, 12, 1, 13, 1, 2, 7, 14, 1, 3, 5, 15, 1, 16, 1, 17, 1, 2, 9, 18, 1, 19, 1, 4, 5, 20, 1, 3, 7, 21, 1, 2, 11, 22, 1, 23, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24, 1, 25, 1, 2, 13, 26, 1, 3, 9, 27, 1, 4, 7, 28, 1, 29, 1
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Eric W. Weisstein, Nov 11 2002

Keywords

Comments

The first difference from the triangle A222266 (bi-unitary divisors of n) is in row n = 16; indeed, the 16th row of A222266 is (1, 2, 8, 16) while the 16th of this sequence here is (1, 16). - Bernard Schott, Mar 10 2023
The concept of infinitary divisors was introduced by Cohen (1990). - Amiram Eldar, Mar 09 2024

Examples

			The first few rows are:
  1;
  1, 2;
  1, 3;
  1, 4;
  1, 5;
  1, 2, 3, 6;
  1, 7;
  1, 2, 4, 8;
  1, 9;
  1, 2, 5, 10;
  1, 11;
  1, 3, 4, 12;
  1, 13;
  1, 2, 7, 14;
  1, 3, 5, 15;
  1, 16;
  1, 17;
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A027750, A037445 (row lengths), A049417 (row sums).
Cf. A222266.

Programs

  • Haskell
    import Data.List ((\\))
    a077609 n k = a077609_row n !! (k-1)
    a077609_row n = filter
       (\d -> d == 1 || null (a213925_row d \\ a213925_row n)) $ a027750_row n
    a077609_tabf = map a077609_row [1..]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 10 2013
    
  • Maple
    # see the function idivisors() in A049417. # R. J. Mathar, Oct 05 2017
  • Mathematica
    f[x_] := If[x == 1, 1, Sort@ Flatten@ Outer[Times, Sequence @@ (FactorInteger[x] /. {p_, m_Integer} :> p^Select[Range[0, m], BitOr[m, #] == m &])]] ; Array[f, 30] // Flatten (* Paul Abbott (paul(AT)physics.uwa.edu.au), Apr 29 2005 *) (* edited by Michael De Vlieger, Jun 07 2016 *)
  • PARI
    isidiv(d, f) = {if (d==1, return (1)); for (k=1, #f~, bne = binary(f[k,2]); bde = binary(valuation(d, f[k,1])); if (#bde < #bne, bde = concat(vector(#bne-#bde), bde)); for (j=1, #bne, if (! bne[j] && bde[j], return (0)););); return (1);}
    row(n) = {d = divisors(n); f = factor(n); idiv = []; for (k=1, #d, if (isidiv(d[k], f), idiv = concat(idiv, d[k]));); idiv;} \\ Michel Marcus, Feb 15 2016

A036537 Numbers whose number of divisors is a power of 2.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 46, 47, 51, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62, 65, 66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 73, 74, 77, 78, 79, 82, 83, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 91, 93, 94, 95, 97, 101, 102
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Primes and A030513(d(x)=4) are subsets; d(16k+4) and d(16k+12) have the form 3Q, so x=16k+4 or 16k-4 numbers are missing.
A number m is a term if and only if all its divisors are infinitary, or A000005(m) = A037445(m). - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 23 2017
All exponents in the prime number factorization of a(n) have the form 2^k-1, k >= 1. So it is an S-exponential sequence (see Shevelev link) with S={2^k-1}. Using Theorem 1, we obtain that a(n) ~ C*n, where C = Product((1-1/p)*(1 + Sum_{i>=1} 1/p^(2^i-1))). - Vladimir Shevelev Feb 27 2017
This constant is C = 0.687827... . - Peter J. C. Moses, Feb 27 2017
From Peter Munn, Jun 18 2022: (Start)
1 and numbers j*m^2, j squarefree, m >= 1, such that all prime divisors of m divide j, and m is in the sequence.
Equivalently, the nonempty set of numbers whose squarefree part (A007913) and squarefree kernel (A007947) are equal, and whose square part's square root (A000188) is in the set.
(End)

Examples

			383, 384, 385, 386 have 2, 16, 8, 4 divisors, respectively, so they are consecutive terms of this sequence.
		

Crossrefs

A005117, A030513, A058891, A175496, A336591 are subsequences.
Complement of A162643; subsequence of A002035. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 08 2009
Subsequence of A162644, A337533.
The closure of the squarefree numbers under application of A355038(.) and lcm.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a036537 n = a036537_list !! (n-1)
    a036537_list = filter ((== 1) . a209229 . a000005) [1..]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 15 2012
    
  • Mathematica
    bi[ x_ ] := 1-Sign[ N[ Log[ 2, x ], 5 ]-Floor[ N[ Log[ 2, x ], 5 ] ] ]; ld[ x_ ] := Length[ Divisors[ x ] ]; Flatten[ Position[ Table[ bi[ ld[ x ] ], {x, 1, m} ], 1 ] ]
    Select[Range[110],IntegerQ[Log[2,DivisorSigma[0,#]]]&] (* Harvey P. Dale, Nov 20 2016 *)
  • PARI
    is(n)=n=numdiv(n);n>>valuation(n,2)==1 \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Mar 27 2013
    
  • PARI
    isok(m) = issquarefree(m) || (omega(m) == omega(core(m)) && isok(core(m,1)[2])); \\ Peter Munn, Jun 18 2022
    
  • Python
    from itertools import count, islice
    from sympy import factorint
    def A036537_gen(startvalue=1): # generator of terms >= startvalue
        return filter(lambda n:all(map(lambda m:not((k:=m+1)&-k)^k,factorint(n).values())),count(max(startvalue,1)))
    A036537_list = list(islice(A036537_gen(),30)) # Chai Wah Wu, Jan 04 2023

Formula

A209229(A000005(a(n))) = 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 15 2012
a(n) << n. - Charles R Greathouse IV, Feb 25 2017
m is in the sequence iff for k >= 0, A352780(m, k+1) | A352780(m, k)^2. - Peter Munn, Jun 18 2022
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