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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A259210 Positive hexagonal numbers (A000384) that are other hexagonal numbers divided by 3.

Original entry on oeis.org

15, 567645, 21362755051, 803965923024825, 30256453525753512135, 1138671371184241752666901, 42852758352891300594112643235, 1612720706714039835374593462842225, 60693131033623416811596149786491655551, 2284125291706662961573569665690233502167245
Offset: 1

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Author

Colin Barker, Jun 21 2015

Keywords

Examples

			15 is in the sequence because 15 is the 3rd hexagonal number, and 3*15 is the 5th hexagonal number.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • PARI
    Vec(-x*(x^2+3120*x+15)/((x-1)*(x^2-37634*x+1)) + O(x^20))

Formula

a(n) = 37635*a(n-1)-37635*a(n-2)+a(n-3).
G.f.: -x*(x^2+3120*x+15) / ((x-1)*(x^2-37634*x+1)).

A259211 Positive octagonal numbers (A000567) that are other octagonal numbers divided by 3.

Original entry on oeis.org

560, 4090071480, 29860802042948800, 218007803276760596488520, 1591631806178550455562538466640, 11620188673811755515268615201727379160, 84836696710140620657577957851546090689242080, 619375925014776443389412658082968133380998230391400
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Colin Barker, Jun 21 2015

Keywords

Examples

			560 is in the sequence because 560 is the 14th octagonal number, and 3*560=1680 is the 24th octagonal number.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    CoefficientList[Series[40 (x^2 + 40545 x + 14)/((1 - x) (x^2 - 7300802 x + 1)), {x, 0, 40}], x] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Jun 21 2015 *)
    LinearRecurrence[{7300803,-7300803,1},{560,4090071480,29860802042948800},20] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jan 28 2025 *)
  • PARI
    Vec(-40*x*(x^2+40545*x+14)/((x-1)*(x^2-7300802*x+1)) + O(x^20))

Formula

a(n) = 7300803*a(n-1)-7300803*a(n-2)+a(n-3).
G.f.: -40*x*(x^2+40545*x+14) / ((x-1)*(x^2-7300802*x+1)).

A077830 Expansion of 1/(1-3*x-2*x^2-3*x^3).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 11, 42, 157, 588, 2204, 8259, 30949, 115977, 434606, 1628619, 6103000, 22870056, 85702025, 321155187, 1203479779, 4509855786, 16899992477, 63330128340, 237319937332, 889320046107, 3332590398005, 12488371098225, 46798254229006, 175369276077483
Offset: 0

Views

Author

N. J. A. Sloane, Nov 17 2002

Keywords

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    CoefficientList[Series[1/(1-3x-2x^2-3x^3),{x,0,40}],x] (* or *) LinearRecurrence[{3,2,3},{1,3,11},40] (* Harvey P. Dale, Nov 05 2021 *)

A341894 For square n > 0, a(n) = 0; for nonsquare n > 0, a(n) is the rank r such that t(r) + t(r-1) = u(r) - u(r-1) - 1, where u(r) and t(r) are indices of some triangular numbers in the Diophantine relation T(u(r)) = n*T(t(r)).

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 1, 0, 2, 2, 2, 2, 0, 3, 2, 2, 4, 2, 2, 0, 2, 2, 3, 2, 4, 4, 2, 2, 0, 3, 2, 4, 4, 2, 4, 2, 2, 2, 2, 0, 2, 2, 2, 4, 4, 2, 4, 2, 4, 6, 2, 2, 0, 3, 3, 4, 4, 2, 4, 2, 4, 4, 2, 2, 8, 2, 2, 0, 2, 4, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, 2, 6, 2, 2, 6, 4, 4, 2, 2, 0, 3, 2, 2, 8, 4, 2, 4, 4, 2, 6, 4, 4, 4, 2, 4, 4, 2, 2, 0, 2, 2, 4, 2, 4, 8, 2, 2, 8, 2
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Vladimir Pletser, Mar 06 2021

Keywords

Comments

Let t(i) and u(j) be the indices of triangular numbers that satisfy the Diophantine relation T(u(j)) = n*T(t(i)) for some integers i and j. The number of solutions (t(i), u(j)) of T(u(j)) = n*T(t(i)) is 0 or 1 for square n, and an infinity for nonsquare n.
For square n, a(n) is arbitrarily set to 0.
For nonsquare n, a(n) is the index r in the sequence of t(i) and u(j) such that t(r) + t(r-1) = u(r) - u(r-1) - 1.
Alternatively, for nonsquare n, a(n) is the index r such that the ratio t(i)/t(i-r) is decreasing monotonically without jumps for increasing values of i.
Alternatively, for n > 4, a(n) is the index r such that the ratio t(r)/t(r-1) varies between (s+1)/(s-1) and (s+2)/s, with s = [sqrt(n)], where [x] = floor(x).
Alternatively, for nonsquare n, a(n) is the number of fundamental solutions (X_f, Y_f) of the generalized Pell equation X^2 - n*Y^2 = 1 - n providing odd solutions, i.e., with X_f odd and Y_f odd (or Y_f even if y_f is odd, where y_f is the fundamental solution of the associated simple Pell equation x^2 - n*y^2 = 1).

Examples

			The following table gives the first values of nonsquare n and a(n) and the sequences yielding the values of t, u, T(t) and T(u) such that T(u) = n*T(t).
n       2       3       5       6       7       8      10
a(n)    1       1       2       2       2       2       3
t    A053141 A061278 A077259 A077288 A077398 A336623  A341893*
u    A001652 A001571 A077262 A077291 A077401 A336625* A341895*
T(t) A075528 A076139 A077260 A077289 A077399 A336624  A068085*
T(u) A029549 A076140 A077261 A077290 A077400 A336626*   -
With a(n) = r, the definition t(r) + t(r-1) = u(r) - u(r-1) - 1 yields:
- For n = 2, a(n) = 1: A053141(1) + A053141(0) = A001652(1) - A001652(0) - 1, i.e., 2 + 0 = 3 + 0 - 1 = 2.
- For n = 5, a(n) = 2: A077259(2) + A077259(1) = A077262(2) - A077262(1) - 1, i.e., 6 + 2 = 14 - 5 - 1 = 8.
- For n = 10, a(n) = 3: A341893(3+1*) + A341893(2+1*) = A341895(3+1*) - A341895(2+1*) - 1, i.e., 12 + 6 = 39 - 20 - 1 = 18.
Note that for those sequences marked with an *, the first term 0 appears for n = 1, contrary to all the other sequences, where the first term 0 appears for n = 0; the numbering must therefore be adapted and 1 must be added to compensate for this shift in indices.
The monotonic decrease of t(i)/t(i-r) can be seen also as:
- For n = 2, a(n) = 1: for 1 <= i <= 6, A053141(i)/A053141(i-1) decreases monotonically from 7 to 5.829.
- For n = 5, a(n) = 2: for 3 <= i <= 8, A077259(i)/A077259(i-2) decreases monotonically from 22 to 17.948, while A077259(i)/A077259(i-1) takes values alternatively varying between 3 and 2.618 and between 7.333 and 6.855.
- For n = 10, a(n) = 3: for 4 <= i <= 10, A341893(i)/A341893(i-3) decreases monotonically from 55 to 38, while A077259(i) / A077259(i-1) takes values alternatively varying between 6 and 4.44 and between 2 and 1.925.
For n > 4, the relation (s+1)/(s-1) <=  t(r)/t(r-1) <= (s+2)/s, with s = [sqrt(n)], yields:
- For n = 5, a(n) = 2: A077259(2)/A077259(1) = 6/2 = 3, and s = [sqrt(5)] = 2, (s+1)/(s-1) = 3 and (s+2)/s = 2.
- For n = 10, a(n) = 3: A077259(3+1*)/A077259(2+1*) = 12/6 = 2, and s = [sqrt(10)] = 3, (s+1)/(s-1) = 2 and (s+2)/s = 5/3 = 1.667.
Finally, the number of fundamental solutions of the generalized Pell equation is as follows.
- For n = 2, X^2 - 2*Y^2 = -1 has a single fundamental solution, (X_f, Y_f) = (1, 1), and the rank a(n) is 1.
- For n = 5, X^2 - 5*Y^2 = -4 has two fundamental solutions, (X_f, Y_f) = (1, 1) and (-1, 1), and the rank a(n) is 2.
- For n = 10, X^2 - 10*Y^2 = -9 has three fundamental solutions, (X_f, Y_f) = (1, 1), (-1, 1), and (9, 3), and the rank a(n) is 3.
		

References

  • J. S. Chahal and H. D'Souza, "Some remarks on triangular numbers", in A.D. Pollington and W. Mean, eds., Number Theory with an Emphasis on the Markov Spectrum, Lecture Notes in Pure Math, Dekker, New York, 1993, 61-67.

Crossrefs

Previous Showing 21-24 of 24 results.