Search: id:A003261
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%I A003261 M4379
%S A003261 1,7,23,63,159,383,895,2047,4607,10239,22527,49151,106495,229375,
%T A003261 491519,1048575,2228223,4718591,9961471,20971519,44040191,92274687,
%U A003261 192937983,402653183,838860799,1744830463,3623878655,7516192767
%N A003261 Woodall (or Riesel) numbers: n*2^n - 1.
%C A003261 For n>1, a(n) is base at which zero is reached for the function "write
f(j) in base j, read as base j+1 and then subtract 1 to give f(j+1)"
starting from f(n)=n^2-1 - Henry Bottomley (se16(AT)btinternet.com),
Aug 06 2000
%C A003261 Sequence corresponds also to the maximum chain length of the classic
puzzle whereby, under agreed commercial terms, an asset of unringed
golden chain, when judiciously fragmented into as few as n pieces
and n-1 opened links (through n-1 cuts), might be used to settle
debt sequentially, with a golden link covering for unit cost. Here
beside the n-1 opened links, the n fragmented pieces have lengths
n, 2*n, 4*n, ..., 2^(n-1)*n. For instance, the chain of original
length a(5)=159, if segregated by 4 cuts into 5+1+10+1+20+1+40+1+80,
may be used to pay sequentially, i.e. a link-cost at a time, for
an equivalent cost up to 159 links, to the same creditor. - Lekraj
Beedassy (blekraj(AT)yahoo.com), Feb 06 2003
%D A003261 N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences,
Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
%D A003261 S. Plouffe, Approximations de S\'{e}ries G\'{e}n\'{e}ratrices et Quelques
Conjectures, Dissertation, Universit\'{e} du Qu\'{e}bec \`{a} Montr\'{e}al,
1992.
%D A003261 A. Brousseau, Number Theory Tables. Fibonacci Association, San Jose,
CA, 1973, p. 159.
%D A003261 K. R. Bhutani and A. B. Levin, "The Problem of Sawing a Chain", Journal
of Recreational Mathematics 2002-3 31(1) 32-35.
%D A003261 G. Everest, A. van der Poorten, I. Shparlinski and T. Ward, Recurrence
Sequences, Amer. Math. Soc., 2003; see esp. p. 255.
%D A003261 M. Gardner, Martin Gardner's Sixth Book of Mathematical Diversions from
Scientific American, "Gold Links", Problem 4, pp. 50-51; 57-58, University
of Chicago Press, 1983.
%H A003261 T. D. Noe, Table of n, a(n) for n=1..300
%H A003261 S. Plouffe,
Approximations de S\'{e}ries G\'{e}n\'{e}ratrices et Quelques Conjectures
a>, Dissertation, Universit\'{e} du Qu\'{e}bec \`{a} Montr\'{e}al,
1992.
%H A003261 S. Plouffe,
1031 Generating Functions and Conjectures, Universit\'{e} du
Qu\'{e}bec \`{a} Montr\'{e}al, 1992.
%H A003261 Ray Ballinger, Woodall
Primes: Definition and Status
%H A003261 C. K. Caldwell,
Woodall Numbers
%H A003261 Paul Leyland, Factors of Cullen and Woodall numbers
%H A003261 Paul Leyland, Generalized Cullen and Woodall numbers
%H A003261 Hisanori Mishima, Factorizations of many number sequences
%H A003261 Hisanori Mishima, Factorizations of many number sequences
%H A003261 Hisanori Mishima, Factorizations of many number sequences
%H A003261 Hisanori Mishima, Factorizations of many number sequences
%H A003261 Hisanori Mishima, Factorizations of many number sequences
%H A003261 T. Sillke, Using Chains Links To Pay For A Room
%H A003261 Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Link to a section of The World of Mathematics.
a>
%H A003261 Wikipedia, Woodall
number
%F A003261 Binomial transform of A133653 and double binomial transform of [1, 5,
-1, 1, -1, 1,...]. - Gary W. Adamson (qntmpkt(AT)yahoo.com), Sep
19 2007
%p A003261 A003261:=(-1-2*z+4*z**2)/(z-1)/(-1+2*z)**2; [Conjectured by S. Plouffe
in his 1992 dissertation.]
%Y A003261 Cf. A002234, A002064, A005849, A050918.
%Y A003261 a(n) = A036289(n)-1 = A002064(n)-2.
%Y A003261 Cf. A133653.
%Y A003261 Sequence in context: A077037 A104149 A001275 this_sequence A066187 A114246
A048457
%Y A003261 Adjacent sequences: A003258 A003259 A003260 this_sequence A003262 A003263
A003264
%K A003261 nonn,easy,nice
%O A003261 1,2
%A A003261 N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com).
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