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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A161915 Digital root of Ramanujan primes (A104272).

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 2, 8, 2, 5, 2, 5, 4, 8, 7, 2, 8, 1, 5, 7, 5, 8, 1, 2, 4, 8, 5, 7, 2, 8, 2, 1, 5, 5, 7, 7, 4, 5, 4, 5, 8, 1, 7, 2, 1, 5, 8, 2, 4, 2, 8, 5, 7, 4, 2, 4, 8, 5, 2, 2, 8, 7, 1, 4, 4, 8, 2, 4, 8, 7, 2, 8, 1, 5, 2, 4, 2, 1, 2, 4, 5, 5, 7, 8, 1, 7, 2, 8, 5, 8, 2, 8, 2, 5, 7, 8, 2, 1, 5, 8, 5, 1, 5, 7, 8, 7, 2, 5, 2, 4
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Parthasarathy Nambi, Jun 22 2009

Keywords

Examples

			659 is a Ramanujan's prime whose digital root is 2.
		

Crossrefs

Extensions

a(53) corrected by R. J. Mathar, Jul 08 2009

A166576 Intersection of A104272 and A166252.

Original entry on oeis.org

71, 101, 151, 181, 229, 233, 239, 241, 269, 311, 349, 373, 409, 419, 433, 439, 491, 571, 593, 599, 601, 607, 643, 647, 653, 659, 727, 823, 827, 857, 941, 947, 1021, 1031, 1051, 1061, 1063, 1091, 1103, 1301, 1373, 1427, 1429, 1447, 1451, 1489, 1553, 1559, 1567
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Vladimir Shevelev, Oct 17 2009

Keywords

Comments

Each Ramanujan prime A104272 larger than 2 is either a central prime (A166272) or a right prime (A166307).

Extensions

Extended beyond 571 by R. J. Mathar, Oct 21 2009

A182392 Numbers n for which there exists only composite number k such that A060715(k) = n and 2*k-1 is prime, but A104272(n) differs from A080359(n).

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 8, 36, 55, 58, 83, 129, 134, 143, 155, 186, 197, 207, 218, 269, 295, 309, 310, 361, 362, 380, 396, 412, 454, 466, 473, 505, 511, 514, 544, 549, 556, 563, 616, 631, 660, 666, 677, 683, 697, 771, 781, 788, 797, 812, 873, 874, 881, 883, 894, 906, 953
Offset: 1

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Author

Keywords

Comments

There exists a prime p=p(n) such that 2*p-1 is prime and A060715(p)=a(n)-1 (cf. comment in A182391).

Crossrefs

A214934 Numbers R(k) such that R(k) >= 2k log R(k), where R(k) = A104272(k) is the k-th Ramanujan prime.

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 11, 17, 29, 41, 47, 59, 97, 127, 149, 151, 167, 179, 227, 229, 233, 347, 367, 401, 409, 569, 571, 587, 593, 937, 1423, 1427, 2237, 2617, 2657, 2659, 3251
Offset: 1

Views

Author

John W. Nicholson, Jan 03 2013

Keywords

Comments

For all R(k) > 3251, or all k > 201, R(k) < 2k log R(k). - John W. Nicholson, Nov 05 2016

Programs

  • Mathematica
    nn = 201; R = Table[0, {nn}]; s = 0; Do[ If[ PrimeQ[k], s++]; If[ PrimeQ[k/2], s--]; If[s < nn, R[[s +1]] = k], {k, Prime[3nn]}]; R = R +1; R[[#]] & /@ Select[ Range@ nn, R[[#]] >= 2#*Log[R[[#]]] &] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Nov 05 2016 after T. D. Noe in A104272 *)
  • PARI
    \\With RR[i] a list of Ramanujan primes in A104272.
    \\Program also gives the index i of A104272.
    n=0;for(i=1,10^6,if(RR[i]/(2*i)>=log(RR[i]), print(n++," "i," ",primepi(RR[i])," ",RR[i])))

A233866 Ramanujan primes A104272 that are primes p(k) such that (k+1)*p(k)>k*p(k+1).

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 11, 17, 29, 41, 59, 71, 101, 107, 127, 149, 179, 227, 229, 281, 307, 311, 347, 349, 419, 431, 439, 461, 487, 569, 599, 641, 643, 659, 739, 769, 809, 821, 823, 853, 857, 937, 967, 983, 1009, 1019, 1031, 1049, 1061, 1087, 1091, 1151, 1187, 1217, 1229
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Irina Gerasimova, Dec 17 2013

Keywords

Comments

Non-Ramanujan primes (A174635) that are primes p(k) such that (k+1)*p(k)>k*p(k+1): 137, 163, 191, 197, 223, 277, 379, 397, 457, 499, 521, 613, 617, 673, 757, 859, 877, 907, 1093, 1181, 1213, 1223, 1231,...
Primes p(k) such that (k+1)*p(k)> k*p(k+1): 2, 11, 17, 29, 41, 59, 71,...
primes p(k) such that (k+1)*p(k) - k*p(k+1)=1: 2, 11,...
Primes p(m) such that (m+1)*p(m) < m*p(m+1): 3, 5, 7, 13, 19, 23, 31,...

Examples

			Ramanujan prime 2 is in this sequence because 2 = p(1) such that (1 + 1)*p(1) = 2*2 = 4 > 1*p(1 + 1) = 3;
Ramanujan prime 11 is in this sequence because 11 = p(5) such that (5 + 1)*p(5) = 6*11 = 66 > 5*p(5 + 1) = 65.
		

A233933 Smallest number k such that R(n) is the n-th divisor of k, where R(n) is the n-th Ramanujan prime (A104272).

Original entry on oeis.org

11, 34, 116, 246, 752, 708, 4288, 1704, 3492, 4848, 11556, 7620, 28608, 47112, 24048, 21480, 45612, 40860, 54960, 218088, 180684, 121464, 94680, 242100, 269760, 486288, 313488, 249840, 376920, 308280, 738540, 721800, 515340, 1106160, 930960, 935280, 737520
Offset: 2

Views

Author

Michel Lagneau, Dec 18 2013

Keywords

Examples

			a(2) = 11 because the divisors of 11 are {1, 11}, and the 2nd divisor of 11 is 11 = A104272(2);
a(3) = 34 because the divisors of 34 are {1, 2, 17, 34}, and the 3rd divisor of 34 is 17 = A104272(3).
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    nn=20; R=Table[0,{nn}]; s=0; Do[If[PrimeQ[k],s++]; If[PrimeQ[k/2],s--]; If[sT. D. Noe adapted for this sequence - see A104272 and A221647 *)

A235923 Minimal k > 1 such that the base-k representation of the n-th Ramanujan prime (A104272), read in decimal, is also a Ramanujan prime.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 10, 4, 7, 10, 2, 10, 6, 5, 6, 5, 10, 7, 10, 8, 10, 2, 10, 10, 2, 10, 7, 4, 10, 10, 8, 3, 4, 10, 3, 3, 3, 10, 10, 4, 10, 3, 10, 10, 6, 7, 10
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Vladimir Shevelev, Jan 17 2014

Keywords

Comments

Conjecture 1. Every number 2,...,10 occurs infinitely many times.
Conjecture 2. There exists limit of average (a(1)+...+a(n))/n.
However note that, already for the eleventh Ramanujan prime 101 the binary representation, read in decimal, is rather large prime: 1100101. We cannot decide, if it is a Ramanujan prime, using b-file in A104272. Therefore, the calculation of the sequence here ends off. It is a general problem: how to decide, if a large prime is a Ramanujan one?

Examples

			The third Ramanujan prime is 17. If k=2, we have 10001, if k=3, we have 122, if k=4, we have 101. In this list, read in decimal, 101 is the first prime. Since 101 is a Ramanujan prime, then a(3)=4.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • PARI
    ramanujan_prime_list(n) = {my(L=vector(n), s=0, k=1); for(k=1, prime(3*n)-1, if(isprime(k), s++); if(k%2==0 && isprime(k/2), s--); if(sA104272
    a(n, vp, pmax) = {my(p=vp[n], d, np); for (b=2, 10, d = digits(p, b); np = fromdigits(d, 10); if (np > pmax, return (0)); if (vecsearch(vp, np), return (b)););}
    lista(nn) = {my(vp = ramanujan_prime_list(nn), pmax = vecmax(vp)); for (n=1, nn, my(result = a(n, vp, pmax)); if (result, print1(result, ", "), break););} \\ use nn=10^7 to get 42 terms \\ Michel Marcus, Dec 17 2018

Extensions

a(11)-a(42) from Michel Marcus, Dec 17 2018

A000040 The prime numbers.

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 101, 103, 107, 109, 113, 127, 131, 137, 139, 149, 151, 157, 163, 167, 173, 179, 181, 191, 193, 197, 199, 211, 223, 227, 229, 233, 239, 241, 251, 257, 263, 269, 271
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

See A065091 for comments, formulas etc. concerning only odd primes. For all information concerning prime powers, see A000961. For contributions concerning "almost primes" see A002808.
A number p is prime if (and only if) it is greater than 1 and has no positive divisors except 1 and p.
A natural number is prime if and only if it has exactly two (positive) divisors.
A prime has exactly one proper positive divisor, 1.
The paper by Kaoru Motose starts as follows: "Let q be a prime divisor of a Mersenne number 2^p-1 where p is prime. Then p is the order of 2 (mod q). Thus p is a divisor of q - 1 and q > p. This shows that there exist infinitely many prime numbers." - Pieter Moree, Oct 14 2004
1 is not a prime, for if the primes included 1, then the factorization of a natural number n into a product of primes would not be unique, since n = n*1.
Prime(n) and pi(n) are inverse functions: A000720(a(n)) = n and a(n) is the least number m such that a(A000720(m)) = a(n). a(A000720(n)) = n if (and only if) n is prime.
Second sequence ever computed by electronic computer, on EDSAC, May 09 1949 (see Renwick link). - Russ Cox, Apr 20 2006
Every prime p > 3 is a linear combination of previous primes prime(n) with nonzero coefficients c(n) and |c(n)| < prime(n). - Amarnath Murthy, Franklin T. Adams-Watters and Joshua Zucker, May 17 2006; clarified by Chayim Lowen, Jul 17 2015
The Greek transliteration of 'Prime Number' is 'Protos Arithmos'. - Daniel Forgues, May 08 2009 [Edited by Petros Hadjicostas, Nov 18 2019]
A number n is prime if and only if it is different from zero and different from a unit and each multiple of n decomposes into factors such that n divides at least one of the factors. This applies equally to the integers (where a prime has exactly four divisors (the definition of divisors is relaxed such that they can be negative)) and the positive integers (where a prime has exactly two distinct divisors). - Peter Luschny, Oct 09 2012
Motivated by his conjecture on representations of integers by alternating sums of consecutive primes, for any positive integer n, Zhi-Wei Sun conjectured that the polynomial P_n(x) = Sum_{k=0..n} a(k+1)*x^k is irreducible over the field of rational numbers with the Galois group S_n, and moreover P_n(x) is irreducible mod a(m) for some m <= n(n+1)/2. It seems that no known criterion on irreducibility of polynomials implies this conjecture. - Zhi-Wei Sun, Mar 23 2013
Questions on a(2n) and Ramanujan primes are in A233739. - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 16 2013
From Hieronymus Fischer, Apr 02 2014: (Start)
Natural numbers such that there is exactly one base b such that the base-b alternate digital sum is 0 (see A239707).
Equivalently: Numbers p > 1 such that b = p-1 is the only base >= 1 for which the base-b alternate digital sum is 0.
Equivalently: Numbers p > 1 such that the base-b alternate digital sum is <> 0 for all bases 1 <= b < p-1. (End)
An integer n > 1 is a prime if and only if it is not the sum of positive integers in arithmetic progression with common difference 2. - Jean-Christophe Hervé, Jun 01 2014
Conjecture: Numbers having prime factors <= prime(n+1) are {k|k^f(n) mod primorial(n)=1}, where f(n) = lcm(prime(i)-1, i=1..n) = A058254(n) and primorial(n) = A002110(n). For example, numbers with no prime divisor <= prime(7) = 17 are {k|k^60 mod 30030=1}. - Gary Detlefs, Jun 07 2014
Cramer conjecture prime(n+1) - prime(n) < C log^2 prime(n) is equivalent to the inequality (log prime(n+1)/log prime(n))^n < e^C, as n tend to infinity, where C is an absolute constant. - Thomas Ordowski, Oct 06 2014
I conjecture that for any positive rational number r there are finitely many primes q_1,...,q_k such that r = Sum_{j=1..k} 1/(q_j-1). For example, 2 = 1/(2-1) + 1/(3-1) + 1/(5-1) + 1/(7-1) + 1/(13-1) with 2, 3, 5, 7 and 13 all prime, 1/7 = 1/(13-1) + 1/(29-1) + 1/(43-1) with 13, 29 and 43 all prime, and 5/7 = 1/(3-1) + 1/(7-1) + 1/(31-1) + 1/(71-1) with 3, 7, 31 and 71 all prime. - Zhi-Wei Sun, Sep 09 2015
I also conjecture that for any positive rational number r there are finitely many primes p_1,...,p_k such that r = Sum_{j=1..k} 1/(p_j+1). For example, 1 = 1/(2+1) + 1/(3+1) + 1/(5+1) + 1/(7+1) + 1/(11+1) + 1/(23+1) with 2, 3, 5, 7, 11 and 23 all prime, and 10/11 = 1/(2+1) + 1/(3+1) + 1/(5+1) + 1/(7+1) + 1/(43+1) + 1/(131+1) + 1/(263+1) with 2, 3, 5, 7, 43, 131 and 263 all prime. - Zhi-Wei Sun, Sep 13 2015
Numbers k such that ((k-2)!!)^2 == +-1 (mod k). - Thomas Ordowski, Aug 27 2016
Does not satisfy Benford's law [Diaconis, 1977; Cohen-Katz, 1984; Berger-Hill, 2017]. - N. J. A. Sloane, Feb 07 2017
Prime numbers are the integer roots of 1 - sin(Pi*Gamma(s)/s)/sin(Pi/s). - Peter Luschny, Feb 23 2018
Conjecture: log log a(n+1) - log log a(n) < 1/n. - Thomas Ordowski, Feb 17 2023

Examples

			From _David A. Corneth_, Oct 22 2024: (Start)
7 is a prime number as it has exactly two divisors, 1 and 7.
8 is not a prime number as it does not have exactly two divisors (it has 1, 2, 4 and 8 as divisors though it is sufficient to find one other divisor than 1 and 8)
55 is not a prime number as it does not have exactly two divisors. One other divisor than 1 and 55 is 5.
59 is a prime number as it has exactly two divisors; 1 and 59. (End)
		

References

  • M. Aigner and G. M. Ziegler, Proofs from The Book, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 2nd. ed., 2001; see p. 3.
  • T. M. Apostol, Introduction to Analytic Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 1976, page 2.
  • E. Bach and Jeffrey Shallit, Algorithmic Number Theory, I, Chaps. 8, 9.
  • D. M. Bressoud, Factorization and Primality Testing, Springer-Verlag NY 1989.
  • M. Cipolla, "La determinazione asintotica dell'n-mo numero primo.", Rend. d. R. Acc. di sc. fis. e mat. di Napoli, s. 3, VIII (1902), pp. 132-166.
  • John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. See pp. 127-149.
  • R. Crandall and C. Pomerance, Prime Numbers: A Computational Perspective, Springer, NY, 2001; see p. 1.
  • Martin Davis, "Algorithms, Equations, and Logic", pp. 4-15 of S. Barry Cooper and Andrew Hodges, Eds., "The Once and Future Turing: Computing the World", Cambridge 2016.
  • J.-P. Delahaye, Merveilleux nombres premiers, Pour la Science-Belin Paris, 2000.
  • J.-P. Delahaye, Savoir si un nombre est premier: facile, Pour La Science, 303(1) 2003, pp. 98-102.
  • M. Dietzfelbinger, Primality Testing in Polynomial Time, Springer NY 2004.
  • M. du Sautoy, The Music of the Primes, Fourth Estate / HarperCollins, 2003; see p. 5.
  • J. Elie, "L'algorithme AKS", in 'Quadrature', No. 60, pp. 22-32, 2006 EDP-sciences, Les Ulis (France);
  • W. & F. Ellison, Prime Numbers, Hermann Paris 1985
  • T. Estermann, Introduction to Modern Prime Number Theory, Camb. Univ. Press, 1969.
  • J. M. Gandhi, Formulae for the nth prime. Proc. Washington State Univ. Conf. on Number Theory, 96-106. Wash. St. Univ., Pullman, Wash., 1971.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §3.2 Prime Numbers, pp. 77-78.
  • R. K. Guy, Unsolved Problems Number Theory, Section A.
  • G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers. 3rd ed., Oxford Univ. Press, 1954, p. 2.
  • Peter Hilton and Jean Pedersen, A Mathematical Tapestry: Demonstrating the Beautiful Unity of Mathematics, Cambridge University Press, 2010, pp. (260-264).
  • H. D. Huskey, Derrick Henry Lehmer [1905-1991]. IEEE Ann. Hist. Comput. 17 (1995), no. 2, 64-68. Math. Rev. 96b:01035, cf. http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1336709
  • M. N. Huxley, The Distribution of Prime Numbers, Oxford Univ. Press, 1972.
  • D. S. Jandu, Prime Numbers And Factorization, Infinite Bandwidth Publishing, N. Hollywood CA 2007.
  • E. Landau, Handbuch der Lehre von der Verteilung der Primzahlen, Chelsea, NY, 1974.
  • D. H. Lehmer, The sieve problem for all-purpose computers. Math. Tables and Other Aids to Computation, Math. Tables and Other Aids to Computation, 7, (1953). 6-14. Math. Rev. 14:691e
  • D. N. Lehmer, "List of Prime Numbers from 1 to 10,006,721", Carnegie Institute, Washington, D.C. 1909.
  • W. J. LeVeque, Topics in Number Theory. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 2 vols., 1956, Vol. 1, Chap. 6.
  • H. Lifchitz, Table des nombres premiers de 0 à 20 millions (Tomes I & II), Albert Blanchard, Paris 1971.
  • R. F. Lukes, C. D. Patterson and H. C. Williams, Numerical sieving devices: their history and some applications. Nieuw Arch. Wisk. (4) 13 (1995), no. 1, 113-139. Math. Rev. 96m:11082, cf http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=96m:11082
  • P. Ribenboim, The New Book of Prime Number Records, Springer-Verlag NY 1995.
  • P. Ribenboim, The Little Book of Bigger Primes, Springer-Verlag NY 2004.
  • H. Riesel, Prime Numbers and Computer Methods for Factorization, Birkhäuser Boston, Cambridge MA 1994.
  • B. Rittaud, "31415879. Ce nombre est-il premier?" ['Is this number prime?'], La Recherche, Vol. 361, pp. 70-73, Feb 15 2003, Paris.
  • D. Shanks, Solved and Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, 2nd. ed., Chelsea, 1978, Chap. 1.
  • 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).
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pages 107-119.
  • D. Wells, Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious Figures In Math, J. Wiley NY 2005.
  • H. C. Williams and Jeffrey Shallit, Factoring integers before computers. Mathematics of Computation 1943-1993: a half-century of computational mathematics (Vancouver, BC, 1993), 481-531, Proc. Sympos. Appl. Math., 48, AMS, Providence, RI, 1994. Math. Rev. 95m:11143

Crossrefs

For is_prime and next_prime, see A010051 and A151800.
Cf. A000720 ("pi"), A001223 (differences between primes), A002476, A002808, A003627, A006879, A006880, A008578, A080339, A233588.
Cf. primes in lexicographic order: A210757, A210758, A210759, A210760, A210761.
Cf. A003558, A179480 (relating to the Quasi-order theorem of Hilton and Pedersen).
Boustrophedon transforms: A000747, A000732, A230953.
a(2n) = A104272(n) - A233739(n).
Related sequences:
Primes (p) and composites (c): A002808, A000720, A065855.
Primes between p(n) and 2*p(n): A063124, A070046; between c(n) and 2*c(n): A376761; between n and 2*n: A035250, A060715, A077463, A108954.
Composites between p(n) and 2*p(n): A246514; between c(n) and 2*c(n): A376760; between n and 2*n: A075084, A307912, A307989, A376759.

Programs

  • GAP
    A000040:=Filtered([1..10^5],IsPrime); # Muniru A Asiru, Sep 04 2017
    
  • Haskell
    -- See also Haskell Wiki Link.
    import Data.List (genericIndex)
    a000040 n = genericIndex a000040_list (n - 1)
    a000040_list = base ++ larger where
    base = [2,3,5,7,11,13,17]
    larger = p : filter prime more
    prime n = all ((> 0) . mod n) $ takeWhile (\x -> x*x <= n) larger
    _ : p : more = roll $ makeWheels base
    roll (Wheel n rs) = [n * k + r | k <- [0..], r <- rs]
    makeWheels = foldl nextSize (Wheel 1 [1])
    nextSize (Wheel size bs) p = Wheel (size * p)
    [r | k <- [0..p-1], b <- bs, let r = size*k+b, mod r p > 0]
    data Wheel = Wheel Integer [Integer]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Apr 07 2014
    
  • Magma
    [n : n in [2..500] | IsPrime(n)];
    
  • Magma
    a := func< n | NthPrime(n) >;
    
  • Maple
    A000040 := n->ithprime(n); [ seq(ithprime(i),i=1..100) ];
    # For illustration purposes only:
    isPrime := s -> is(1 = sin(Pi*GAMMA(s)/s)/sin(Pi/s)):
    select(isPrime, [$2..100]); # Peter Luschny, Feb 23 2018
  • Mathematica
    Prime[Range[60]]
  • Maxima
    A000040(n) := block(
    if n = 1 then return(2),
    return( next_prime(A000040(n-1)))
    )$ /* recursive, to be replaced if possible - R. J. Mathar, Feb 27 2012 */
    
  • PARI
    {a(n) = if( n<1, 0, prime(n))};
    
  • PARI
    /* The following functions provide asymptotic approximations, one based on the asymptotic formula cited above (slight overestimate for n > 10^8), the other one based on pi(x) ~ li(x) = Ei(log(x)) (slight underestimate): */
    prime1(n)=n*(log(n)+log(log(n))-1+(log(log(n))-2)/log(n)-((log(log(n))-6)*log(log(n))+11)/log(n)^2/2)
    prime2(n)=solve(X=n*log(n)/2,2*n*log(n),real(eint1(-log(X)))+n)
    \\ M. F. Hasler, Oct 21 2013
    
  • PARI
    forprime(p=2, 10^3, print1(p, ", ")) \\ Felix Fröhlich, Jun 30 2014
    
  • PARI
    primes(10^5) \\ Altug Alkan, Mar 26 2018
    
  • Python
    from sympy import primerange
    print(list(primerange(2, 272))) # Michael S. Branicky, Apr 30 2022
  • Sage
    a = sloane.A000040
    a.list(58)  # Jaap Spies, 2007
    
  • Sage
    prime_range(1, 300)  # Zerinvary Lajos, May 27 2009
    

Formula

The prime number theorem is the statement that a(n) ~ n * log n as n -> infinity (Hardy and Wright, page 10).
For n >= 2, n*(log n + log log n - 3/2) < a(n); for n >= 20, a(n) < n*(log n + log log n - 1/2). [Rosser and Schoenfeld]
For all n, a(n) > n log n. [Rosser]
n log(n) + n (log log n - 1) < a(n) < n log n + n log log n for n >= 6. [Dusart, quoted in the Wikipedia article]
a(n) = n log n + n log log n + (n/log n)*(log log n - log n - 2) + O( n (log log n)^2/ (log n)^2). [Cipolla, see also Cesàro or the "Prime number theorem" Wikipedia article for more terms in the expansion]
a(n) = 2 + Sum_{k = 2..floor(2n*log(n)+2)} (1-floor(pi(k)/n)), for n > 1, where the formula for pi(k) is given in A000720 (Ruiz and Sondow 2002). - Jonathan Sondow, Mar 06 2004
I conjecture that Sum_{i>=1} (1/(prime(i)*log(prime(i)))) = Pi/2 = 1.570796327...; Sum_{i=1..100000} (1/(prime(i)*log(prime(i)))) = 1.565585514... It converges very slowly. - Miklos Kristof, Feb 12 2007
The last conjecture has been discussed by the math.research newsgroup recently. The sum, which is greater than Pi/2, is shown in sequence A137245. - T. D. Noe, Jan 13 2009
A000005(a(n)) = 2; A002033(a(n+1)) = 1. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Oct 17 2009
A001222(a(n)) = 1. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Nov 10 2009
From Gary Detlefs, Sep 10 2010: (Start)
Conjecture:
a(n) = {n| n! mod n^2 = n(n-1)}, n <> 4.
a(n) = {n| n!*h(n) mod n = n-1}, n <> 4, where h(n) = Sum_{k=1..n} 1/k. (End)
For n = 1..15, a(n) = p + abs(p-3/2) + 1/2, where p = m + int((m-3)/2), and m = n + int((n-2)/8) + int((n-4)/8). - Timothy Hopper, Oct 23 2010
a(2n) <= A104272(n) - 2 for n > 1, and a(2n) ~ A104272(n) as n -> infinity. - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 16 2013
Conjecture: Sequence = {5 and n <> 5| ( Fibonacci(n) mod n = 1 or Fibonacci(n) mod n = n - 1) and 2^(n-1) mod n = 1}. - Gary Detlefs, May 25 2014
Conjecture: Sequence = {5 and n <> 5| ( Fibonacci(n) mod n = 1 or Fibonacci(n) mod n = n - 1) and 2^(3*n) mod 3*n = 8}. - Gary Detlefs, May 28 2014
Satisfies a(n) = 2*n + Sum_{k=1..(a(n)-1)} cot(k*Pi/a(n))*sin(2*k*n^a(n)*Pi/a(n)). - Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jun 29 2016
Sum_{n>=1} 1/a(n)^s = P(s), where P(s) is the prime zeta function. - Eric W. Weisstein, Nov 08 2016
a(n) = floor(1 - log(-1/2 + Sum_{ d | A002110(n-1) } mu(d)/(2^d-1))/log(2)) where mu(d) = A008683(d) [Ghandi, 1971] (see Ribenboim). Golomb gave a proof in 1974: Give each positive integer a probability of W(n) = 1/2^n, then the probability M(d) of the integer multiple of number d equals 1/(2^d-1). Suppose Q = a(1)*a(2)*...*a(n-1) = A002110(n-1), then the probability of random integers that are mutually prime with Q is Sum_{ d | Q } mu(d)*M(d) = Sum_{ d | Q } mu(d)/(2^d-1) = Sum_{ gcd(m, Q) = 1 } W(m) = 1/2 + 1/2^a(n) + 1/2^a(n+1) + 1/2^a(n+2) + ... So ((Sum_{ d | Q } mu(d)/(2^d-1)) - 1/2)*2^a(n) = 1 + x(n), which means that a(n) is the only integer so that 1 < ((Sum_{ d | Q } mu(d)/(2^d-1)) - 1/2)*2^a(n) < 2. - Jinyuan Wang, Apr 08 2019
Conjecture: n * (log(n)+log(log(n))-1+((log(log(n))-A)/log(n))) is asymptotic to a(n) if and only if A=2. - Alain Rocchelli, Feb 12 2025
From Stefano Spezia, Apr 13 2025: (Start)
a(n) = 1 + Sum_{m=1..2^n} floor(floor(n/Sum_{j=1..m} A080339(j))^(1/n)) [Willans, 1964].
a(n) = 1 + Sum_{m=1..2^n} floor(floor(n/(1 + A000720(m)))^(1/n)) [Willans, 1964]. (End)

A000720 pi(n), the number of primes <= n. Sometimes called PrimePi(n) to distinguish it from the number 3.14159...

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 5, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 8, 8, 8, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 10, 10, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 12, 12, 12, 12, 13, 13, 14, 14, 14, 14, 15, 15, 15, 15, 15, 15, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 17, 17, 18, 18, 18, 18, 18, 18, 19, 19, 19, 19, 20, 20, 21, 21, 21, 21, 21, 21
Offset: 1

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Comments

Partial sums of A010051 (characteristic function of primes). - Jeremy Gardiner, Aug 13 2002
pi(n) and prime(n) are inverse functions: a(A000040(n)) = n and A000040(n) is the least number m such that A000040(a(m)) = A000040(n). A000040(a(n)) = n if (and only if) n is prime. - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 27 2004
See the additional references and links mentioned in A143227. - Jonathan Sondow, Aug 03 2008
A lower bound that gets better with larger N is that there are at least T prime numbers less than N, where the recursive function T is: T = N - N*Sum_{i=0..T(sqrt(N))} A005867(i)/A002110(i). - Ben Paul Thurston, Aug 23 2010
Number of partitions of 2n into exactly two parts with the smallest part prime. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jul 20 2013
Equivalent to the Riemann hypothesis: abs(a(n) - li(n)) < sqrt(n)*log(n)/(8*Pi), for n >= 2657, where li(n) is the logarithmic integral (Lowell Schoenfeld). - Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jul 05 2016
The second Hardy-Littlewood conjecture, that pi(x) + pi(y) >= pi(x + y) for integers x and y with min{x, y} >= 2, is known to hold for (x, y) sufficiently large (Udrescu 1975). - Peter Luschny, Jan 12 2021

Examples

			There are 3 primes <= 6, namely 2, 3 and 5, so pi(6) = 3.
		

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. 870.
  • Tom M. Apostol, Introduction to Analytic Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 1976, p. 8.
  • Raymond Ayoub, An Introduction to the Analytic Theory of Numbers, Amer. Math. Soc., 1963; p. 129.
  • Florian Cajori, A History of Mathematical Notations, Dover edition (2012), par. 409.
  • Richard Crandall and Carl Pomerance, Prime Numbers: A Computational Perspective, Springer, NY, 2001; see p. 5.
  • G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, 5th ed., Oxford Univ. Press, 1979, Theorems 6, 7, 420.
  • G. J. O. Jameson, The Prime Number Theorem, Camb. Univ. Press, 2003. [See also the review by D. M. Bressoud (link below).]
  • Władysław Narkiewicz, The Development of Prime Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 2000.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The Little Book of Bigger Primes, Springer-Verlag NY 2004. See pp. 132-133, 157-184.
  • József Sándor, Dragoslav S. Mitrinovic and Borislav Crstici, Handbook of Number Theory I, Springer Science & Business Media, 2005, Section VII.1. (For inequalities, etc.).
  • 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).
  • Gerald Tenenbaum and Michel Mendès France, Prime Numbers and Their Distribution, AMS Providence RI, 1999.
  • V. Udrescu, Some remarks concerning the conjecture pi(x + y) <= pi(x) + pi(y), Rev. Roumaine Math. Pures Appl. 20 (1975), 1201-1208.

Crossrefs

Closely related:
A099802: Number of primes <= 2n.
A060715: Number of primes between n and 2n (exclusive).
A035250: Number of primes between n and 2n (inclusive).
A038107: Number of primes < n^2.
A014085: Number of primes between n^2 and (n+1)^2.
A007053: Number of primes <= 2^n.
A036378: Number of primes p between powers of 2, 2^n < p <= 2^(n+1).
A006880: Number of primes < 10^n.
A006879: Number of primes with n digits.
A033270: Number of odd primes <= n.
A065855: Number of composites <= n.
For lists of large values of a(n) see, e.g., A005669(n) = a(A002386(n)), A214935(n) = a(A205827(n)).
Related sequences:
Primes (p) and composites (c): A000040, A002808, A065855.
Primes between p(n) and 2*p(n): A063124, A070046; between c(n) and 2*c(n): A376761; between n and 2*n: A035250, A060715, A077463, A108954.
Composites between p(n) and 2*p(n): A246514; between c(n) and 2*c(n): A376760; between n and 2*n: A075084, A307912, A307989, A376759.

Programs

  • Haskell
    a000720 n = a000720_list !! (n-1)
    a000720_list = scanl1 (+) a010051_list  -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Sep 15 2011
    
  • Magma
    [ #PrimesUpTo(n): n in [1..200] ];  // Bruno Berselli, Jul 06 2011
    
  • Maple
    with(numtheory); A000720 := pi; [ seq(A000720(i),i=1..50) ];
  • Mathematica
    A000720[n_] := PrimePi[n]; Table[ A000720[n], {n, 1, 100} ]
    Array[ PrimePi[ # ]&, 100 ]
    Accumulate[Table[Boole[PrimeQ[n]],{n,100}]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jan 17 2015 *)
  • PARI
    A000720=vector(100,n,omega(n!)) \\ For illustration only; better use A000720=primepi
    
  • PARI
    vector(300,j,primepi(j)) \\ Joerg Arndt, May 09 2008
    
  • Python
    from sympy import primepi
    for n in range(1,100): print(primepi(n), end=', ') # Stefano Spezia, Nov 30 2018
  • Sage
    [prime_pi(n) for n in range(1, 79)]  # Zerinvary Lajos, Jun 06 2009
    

Formula

The prime number theorem gives the asymptotic expression a(n) ~ n/log(n).
For x > 1, pi(x) < (x / log x) * (1 + 3/(2 log x)). For x >= 59, pi(x) > (x / log x) * (1 + 1/(2 log x)). [Rosser and Schoenfeld]
For x >= 355991, pi(x) < (x / log(x)) * (1 + 1/log(x) + 2.51/(log(x))^2 ). For x >= 599, pi(x) > (x / log(x)) * (1 + 1/log(x)). [Dusart]
For x >= 55, x/(log(x) + 2) < pi(x) < x/(log(x) - 4). [Rosser]
For n > 1, A138194(n) <= a(n) <= A138195(n) (Tschebyscheff, 1850). - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 04 2008
For n >= 33, a(n) = 1 + Sum_{j=3..n} ((j-2)! - j*floor((j-2)!/j)) (Hardy and Wright); for n >= 1, a(n) = n - 1 + Sum_{j=2..n} (floor((2 - Sum_{i=1..j} (floor(j/i)-floor((j-1)/i)))/j)) (Ruiz and Sondow 2000). - Benoit Cloitre, Aug 31 2003
a(n) = A001221(A000142(n)). - Benoit Cloitre, Jun 03 2005
G.f.: Sum_{p prime} x^p/(1-x) = b(x)/(1-x), where b(x) is the g.f. for A010051. - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Jun 15 2006
a(n) = A036234(n) - 1. - Jaroslav Krizek, Mar 23 2009
From Enrique Pérez Herrero, Jul 12 2010: (Start)
a(n) = Sum_{i=2..n} floor((i+1)/A000203(i)).
a(n) = Sum_{i=2..n} floor(A000010(n)/(i-1)).
a(n) = Sum_{i=2..n} floor(2/A000005(n)). (End)
Let pf(n) denote the set of prime factors of an integer n. Then a(n) = card(pf(n!/floor(n/2)!)). - Peter Luschny, Mar 13 2011
a(n) = -Sum_{p <= n} mu(p). - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jan 04 2013
a(n) = (1/2)*Sum_{p <= n} (mu(p)*d(p)*sigma(p)*phi(p)) + sum_{p <= n} p^2. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jan 04 2013
a(1) = 0 and then, for all k >= 1, repeat k A001223(k) times. - Jean-Christophe Hervé, Oct 29 2013
a(n) = n/(log(n) - 1 - Sum_{k=1..m} A233824(k)/log(n)^k + O(1/log(n)^{m+1})) for m > 0. - Jonathan Sondow, Dec 19 2013
a(n) = A001221(A003418(n)). - Eric Desbiaux, May 01 2014
a(n) = Sum_{j=2..n} H(-sin^2 (Pi*(Gamma(j)+1)/j)) where H(x) is the Heaviside step function, taking H(0)=1. - Keshav Raghavan, Jun 18 2016
a(A014076(n)) = (1/2) * (A014076(n) + 1) - n + 1. - Christopher Heiling, Mar 03 2017
From Steven Foster Clark, Sep 25 2018: (Start)
a(n) = Sum_{m=1..n} A143519(m) * floor(n/m).
a(n) = Sum_{m=1..n} A001221(m) * A002321(floor(n/m)) where A002321() is the Mertens function.
a(n) = Sum_{m=1..n} |A143519(m)| * A002819(floor(n/m)) where A002819() is the Liouville Lambda summatory function and |x| is the absolute value of x.
a(n) = Sum_{m=1..n} A137851(m)/m * H(floor(n/m)) where H(n) = Sum_{m=1..n} 1/m is the harmonic number function.
a(n) = Sum_{m=1..log_2(n)} A008683(m) * A025528(floor(n^(1/m))) where A008683() is the Moebius mu function and A025528() is the prime-power counting function.
(End)
Sum_{k=2..n} 1/a(k) ~ (1/2) * log(n)^2 + O(log(n)) (de Koninck and Ivić, 1980). - Amiram Eldar, Mar 08 2021
a(n) ~ 1/(n^(1/n)-1). - Thomas Ordowski, Jan 30 2023
a(n) = Sum_{j=2..n} floor(((j - 1)! + 1)/j - floor((j - 1)!/j)) [Mináč, unpublished] (see Ribenboim, pp. 132-133). - Stefano Spezia, Apr 13 2025
a(n) = n - 1 - Sum_{k=2..floor(log_2(n))} pi_k(n), where pi_k(n) is the number of k-almost primes <= n. - Daniel Suteu, Aug 27 2025

Extensions

Additional links contributed by Lekraj Beedassy, Dec 23 2003
Edited by M. F. Hasler, Apr 27 2018 and (links recovered) Dec 21 2018

A001359 Lesser of twin primes.

Original entry on oeis.org

3, 5, 11, 17, 29, 41, 59, 71, 101, 107, 137, 149, 179, 191, 197, 227, 239, 269, 281, 311, 347, 419, 431, 461, 521, 569, 599, 617, 641, 659, 809, 821, 827, 857, 881, 1019, 1031, 1049, 1061, 1091, 1151, 1229, 1277, 1289, 1301, 1319, 1427, 1451, 1481, 1487, 1607
Offset: 1

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Comments

Also, solutions to phi(n + 2) = sigma(n). - Conjectured by Jud McCranie, Jan 03 2001; proved by Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 05 2002
The set of primes for which the weight as defined in A117078 is 3 gives this sequence except for the initial 3. - Rémi Eismann, Feb 15 2007
The set of lesser of twin primes larger than three is a proper subset of the set of primes of the form 3n - 1 (A003627). - Paul Muljadi, Jun 05 2008
It is conjectured that A113910(n+4) = a(n+2) for all n. - Creighton Dement, Jan 15 2009
I would like to conjecture that if f(x) is a series whose terms are x^n, where n represents the terms of sequence A001359, and if we inspect {f(x)}^5, the conjecture is that every term of the expansion, say a_n * x^n, where n is odd and at least equal to 15, has a_n >= 1. This is not true for {f(x)}^k, k = 1, 2, 3 or 4, but appears to be true for k >= 5. - Paul Bruckman (pbruckman(AT)hotmail.com), Feb 03 2009
A164292(a(n)) = 1; A010051(a(n) - 2) = 0 for n > 1. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 29 2010
From Jonathan Sondow, May 22 2010: (Start)
About 15% of primes < 19000 are the lesser of twin primes. About 26% of Ramanujan primes A104272 < 19000 are the lesser of twin primes.
About 46% of primes < 19000 are Ramanujan primes. About 78% of the lesser of twin primes < 19000 are Ramanujan primes.
A reason for the jumps is in Section 7 of "Ramanujan primes and Bertrand's postulate" and in Section 4 of "Ramanujan Primes: Bounds, Runs, Twins, and Gaps". (End)
Primes generated by sequence A040976. - Odimar Fabeny, Jul 12 2010
Primes of the form 2*n - 3 with 2*n - 1 prime n > 2. Primes of the form (n^2 - (n-2)^2)/2 - 1 with (n^2 - (n-2)^2)/2 + 1 prime so sum of two consecutive odd numbers/2 - 1. - Pierre CAMI, Jan 02 2012
Conjecture: For any integers n >= m > 0, there are infinitely many integers b > a(n) such that the number Sum_{k=m..n} a(k)*b^(n-k) (i.e., (a(m), ..., a(n)) in base b) is prime; moreover, when m = 1 there is such an integer b < (n+6)^2. - Zhi-Wei Sun, Mar 26 2013
Except for the initial 3, all terms are congruent to 5 mod 6. One consequence of this is that no term of this sequence appears in A030459. - Alonso del Arte, May 11 2013
Aside from the first term, all terms have digital root 2, 5, or 8. - J. W. Helkenberg, Jul 24 2013
The sequence provides all solutions to the generalized Winkler conjecture (A051451) aside from all multiples of 6. Specifically, these solutions start from n = 3 as a(n) - 3. This gives 8, 14, 26, 38, 56, ... An example from the conjecture is solution 38 from twin prime pairs (3, 5), (41, 43). - Bill McEachen, May 16 2014
Conjecture: a(n)^(1/n) is a strictly decreasing function of n. Namely a(n+1)^(1/(n+1)) < a(n)^(1/n) for all n. This conjecture is true for all a(n) <= 1121784847637957. - Jahangeer Kholdi and Farideh Firoozbakht, Nov 21 2014
a(n) are the only primes, p(j), such that (p(j+m) - p(j)) divides (p(j+m) + p(j)) for some m > 0, where p(j) = A000040(j). For all such cases m=1. It is easy to prove, for j > 1, the only common factor of (p(j+m) - p(j)) and (p(j+m) + p(j)) is 2, and there are no common factors if j = 1. Thus, p(j) and p(j+m) are twin primes. Also see A067829 which includes the prime 3. - Richard R. Forberg, Mar 25 2015
Primes prime(k) such that prime(k)! == 1 (mod prime(k+1)) with the exception of prime(991) = 7841 and other unknown primes prime(k) for which (prime(k)+1)*(prime(k)+2)*...*(prime(k+1)-2) == 1 (mod prime(k+1)) where prime(k+1) - prime(k) > 2. - Thomas Ordowski and Robert Israel, Jul 16 2016
For the twin prime criterion of Clement see the link. In Ribenboim, pp. 259-260 a more detailed proof is given. - Wolfdieter Lang, Oct 11 2017
Conjecture: Half of the twin prime pairs can be expressed as 8n + M where M > 8n and each value of M is a distinct composite integer with no more than two prime factors. For example, when n=1, M=21 as 8 + 21 = 29, the lesser of a twin prime pair. - Martin Michael Musatov, Dec 14 2017
For a discussion of bias in the distribution of twin primes, see my article on the Vixra web site. - Waldemar Puszkarz, May 08 2018
Since 2^p == 2 (mod p) (Fermat's little theorem), these are primes p such that 2^p == q (mod p), where q is the next prime after p. - Thomas Ordowski, Oct 29 2019, edited by M. F. Hasler, Nov 14 2019
The yet unproved "Twin Prime Conjecture" states that this sequence is infinite. - M. F. Hasler, Nov 14 2019
Lesser of the twin primes are the set of elements that occur in both A162566, A275697. Proof: A prime p will only have integer solutions to both (p+1)/g(p) and (p-1)/g(p) when p is the lesser of a twin prime, where g(p) is the gap between p and the next prime, because gcd(p+1,p-1) = 2. - Ryan Bresler, Feb 14 2021
From Lorenzo Sauras Altuzarra, Dec 21 2021: (Start)
J. A. Hervás Contreras observed the subsequence 11, 311, 18311, 1518311, 421518311... (see the links), which led me to conjecture the following statements.
I. If i is an integer greater than 2, then there exist positive integers j and k such that a(j) equals the concatenation of 3k and a(i).
II. If k is a positive integer, then there exist positive integers i and j such that a(j) equals the concatenation of 3k and a(i).
III. If i, j, and r are positive integers such that i > 2 and a(j) equals the concatenation of r and a(i), then 3 divides r. (End)

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. 870.
  • T. M. Apostol, Introduction to Analytic Number Theory, Springer-Verlag, 1976, page 6.
  • Jan Gullberg, Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, W. W. Norton & Co., NY & London, 1997, §3.2 Prime Numbers, p. 81.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The New Book of Prime Number Records, Springer-Verlag NY 1996, pp. 259-260.
  • Paulo Ribenboim, The Little Book of Bigger Primes, Springer-Verlag NY 2004. See pp. 192-197.
  • 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).
  • James J. Tattersall, Elementary Number Theory in Nine Chapters, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pages 111-112.

Crossrefs

Subsequence of A003627.
Cf. A104272 (Ramanujan primes), A178127 (lesser of twin Ramanujan primes), A178128 (lesser of twin primes if it is a Ramanujan prime).

Programs

  • Haskell
    a001359 n = a001359_list !! (n-1)
    a001359_list = filter ((== 1) . a010051' . (+ 2)) a000040_list
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 10 2015
    
  • Magma
    [n: n in PrimesUpTo(1610) | IsPrime(n+2)];  // Bruno Berselli, Feb 28 2011
    
  • Maple
    select(k->isprime(k+2),select(isprime,[$1..1616])); # Peter Luschny, Jul 21 2009
    A001359 := proc(n)
       option remember;
       if n = 1
          then 3;
       else
          p := nextprime(procname(n-1)) ;
          while not isprime(p+2) do
             p := nextprime(p) ;
          end do:
          p ;
       end if;
    end proc: # R. J. Mathar, Sep 03 2011
  • Mathematica
    Select[Prime[Range[253]], PrimeQ[# + 2] &] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jun 09 2005 *)
    a[n_] := a[n] = (p = NextPrime[a[n - 1]]; While[!PrimeQ[p + 2], p = NextPrime[p]]; p); a[1] = 3; Table[a[n], {n, 51}]  (* Jean-François Alcover, Dec 13 2011, after R. J. Mathar *)
    nextLesserTwinPrime[p_Integer] := Block[{q = p + 2}, While[NextPrime@ q - q > 2, q = NextPrime@ q]; q]; NestList[nextLesserTwinPrime@# &, 3, 50] (* Robert G. Wilson v, May 20 2014 *)
    Select[Partition[Prime[Range[300]],2,1],#[[2]]-#[[1]]==2&][[All,1]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jan 04 2021 *)
    q = Drop[Prepend[p = Prime[Range[100]], 2], -1];
    Flatten[q[[#]] & /@ Position[p - q, 2]] (* Horst H. Manninger, Mar 28 2021 *)
  • PARI
    A001359(n,p=3) = { while( p+2 < (p=nextprime( p+1 )) || n-->0,); p-2}
    /* The following gives a reasonably good estimate for any value of n from 1 to infinity; compare to A146214. */
    A001359est(n) = solve( x=1,5*n^2/log(n+1), 1.320323631693739*intnum(t=2.02,x+1/x,1/log(t)^2)-log(x) +.5 - n)
    /* The constant is A114907; the expression in front of +.5 is an estimate for A071538(x) */ \\  M. F. Hasler, Dec 10 2008
    
  • Python
    from sympy import primerange, isprime
    print([n for n in primerange(1, 2001) if isprime(n + 2)]) # Indranil Ghosh, Jul 20 2017

Formula

a(n) = A077800(2n-1).
A001359 = { n | A071538(n-1) = A071538(n)-1 }; A071538(A001359(n)) = n. - M. F. Hasler, Dec 10 2008
A001359 = { prime(n) : A069830(n) = A087454(n) }. - Juri-Stepan Gerasimov, Aug 23 2011
a(n) = prime(A029707(n)). - R. J. Mathar, Feb 19 2017
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