cp's OEIS Frontend

This is a front-end for the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, made by Christian Perfect. The idea is to provide OEIS entries in non-ancient HTML, and then to think about how they're presented visually. The source code is on GitHub.

Previous Showing 11-12 of 12 results.

A340638 Integers whose number of divisors that are Zuckerman numbers sets a new record.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 24, 72, 144, 360, 432, 1080, 2016, 2160, 6048, 8064, 15120, 24192, 48384, 88704, 120960, 241920, 266112, 532224, 1064448, 1862784, 2661120, 3725568, 5322240, 7451136, 10450944, 19160064, 20901888, 28740096, 38320128, 57480192, 99283968, 114960384
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Bernard Schott, Jan 14 2021

Keywords

Comments

A Zuckerman number is a number that is divisible by the product of its digits (A007602).
The terms in this sequence are not necessarily Zuckerman numbers. For example a(7) = 72 has product of digits = 14 and 72/14 = 36/7 = 5.142...
The first seven terms are the first seven terms of A087997, then A087997(8) = 66 while a(8) = 144.

Examples

			The 8 divisors of 24 are all Zuckerman numbers, and also, 24 is the smallest integer that has at least 8 divisors that are Zuckerman numbers, hence 24 is a term.
		

Crossrefs

Subsequence of A335038.
Similar for palindromes (A093036), repdigits (A340548), repunits (A340549), Niven numbers (A340637).

Programs

  • Mathematica
    zuckQ[n_] := (prod = Times @@ IntegerDigits[n]) > 0 && Divisible[n, prod]; s[n_] := DivisorSum[n, 1 &, zuckQ[#] &]; smax = 0; seq = {}; Do[s1 = s[n]; If[s1 > smax, smax = s1; AppendTo[seq, n]], {n, 1, 10^5}]; seq (* Amiram Eldar, Jan 14 2021 *)
  • PARI
    isokz(n) = iferr(!(n % vecprod(digits(n))), E, 0); \\ A007602
    lista(nn) = {my(m=0); for (n=1, nn, my(x = sumdiv(n, d, isokz(d));); if (x > m, m = x; print1(n, ", ")););} \\ Michel Marcus, Jan 15 2021

Extensions

More terms from David A. Corneth and Amiram Eldar, Jan 15 2021

A358100 a(n) is the smallest integer that has exactly n divisors whose decimal digits are in strictly decreasing order.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 20, 30, 40, 80, 60, 252, 120, 240, 540, 360, 630, 420, 960, 1440, 840, 1260, 2880, 3360, 4320, 2520, 6720, 5040, 8640, 10080, 15120, 50400, 20160, 40320, 30240, 171360, 90720, 383040, 60480, 120960, 181440, 362880, 544320, 937440, 786240, 2056320
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Bernard Schott, Nov 01 2022

Keywords

Comments

This sequence is finite since A009995 is finite with 1022 nonzero terms, hence the last term is a(1022) = lcm of the 1022 positive terms of A009995.

Examples

			For n=7, the divisors of 30 are {1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 15, 30} of which 7 have their decimal digits in strictly decreasing order (all except 15). No integer < 30 has 7 such divisors, so a(7) = 30.
		

Crossrefs

Similar: A087997 (palindromic), A355303 (undulating), A357172 (increasing order).

Programs

  • Mathematica
    s[n_] := DivisorSum[n, 1 &, Greater @@ IntegerDigits[#] &]; seq[len_, nmax_] := Module[{v = Table[0, {len}], n = 1, c = 0, i}, While[c < len && n < nmax, i = s[n]; If[i <= len && v[[i]] == 0, v[[i]] = n; c++]; n++]; v]; seq[45, 3*10^6] (* Amiram Eldar, Nov 01 2022 *)
  • PARI
    f(n) = sumdiv(n, d, my(dd=digits(d)); vecsort(dd, , 12) == dd); \\ A358099
    a(n) = my(k=1); while(f(k)!=n, k++); k; \\ Michel Marcus, Nov 01 2022

Extensions

More terms from Amiram Eldar, Nov 01 2022
Previous Showing 11-12 of 12 results.