Search: id:A011257 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A011257 %S A011257 1,14,30,51,105,170,194,248,264,364,405,418,477,595,679,714,760,780,1023, %T A011257 1455,1463,1485,1496,1512,1524,1674,1715,1731,1796,1804,2058,2080,2651, %U A011257 2754,2945,3080,3135,3192,3410,3534,3567,3596,3828,3956,4064,4381,4420 %N A011257 Geometric mean of phi(n) and sigma(n) is an integer. %C A011257 For these terms the arithmetic mean is also an integer. It is conjectured that sigma(n) for these numbers is never odd. See also A065146, A028982, A028983. - Labos E. (labos(AT)ana.sote.hu), Oct 18 2001 %C A011257 If p>2 and 2^p-1 is prime (a Mersenne prime) then m=2^(p-2)*(2^p-1) is in the sequence because phi(m)=2^(p-2)*(2^(p-1)-1); sigma(m)= (2^(p-1)-1)*2^p hence (phi(m)*sigma(m))^(1/2)=2^(p-1)*(2^(p-1)-1) is an integer. So for n>1, 2^(A000043(n)-2)*2^(A000043(n)-1) is in the sequence. - Farideh Firoozbakht (mymontain(AT)yahoo.com), Nov 27 2005 %C A011257 From a(2633)=6931232 on, it is no longer true (as was once conjectured) that a(n)>n^2. - M. F. Hasler, Feb 07 2009 %D A011257 J.-M. De Koninck, Ces nombres qui nous fascinent, Entry 51, p. 19, Ellipses, Paris 2008. %D A011257 R. K. Guy, Divisors and desires, Amer. Math. Monthly, 104 (1997), 359-360. %D A011257 Zhang Ming-Zhi (typescript submitted to Unsolved Problems section of Monthly, 96-01-10) %H A011257 M. F. Hasler, Table of n, a(n) for n=1,...,2000 %Y A011257 Cf. A000043, A000668. %Y A011257 Sequence in context: A044075 A044456 A132759 this_sequence A083540 A027575 A104776 %Y A011257 Adjacent sequences: A011254 A011255 A011256 this_sequence A011258 A011259 A011260 %K A011257 nonn %O A011257 1,2 %A A011257 N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com). Search completed in 0.001 seconds