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A035014 a(n) contains n digits (either '3' or '4') and is divisible by 2^n. +0
25
4, 44, 344, 3344, 33344, 433344, 3433344, 33433344, 333433344, 3333433344, 43333433344, 343333433344, 3343333433344, 33343333433344, 433343333433344, 3433343333433344, 43433343333433344, 443433343333433344 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,1

COMMENT

If (n-1)-th term is divisible by 2^n, then n-th term begins with a 4. If not, then n-th term begins with a 3.

Proof of conjecture that a(n) ends with a(n-1): If a(n) is divisible by 2^n, then a(n) is divisible by 2^(n-1), so a(n)-k*10^(n-1) is divisible by 2^(n-1) for integer k, but if k is first digit of a(n) then a(n)-k*10^(n-1) is an n-1 digit number made up of 3s and 4s and divisible by 2^(n-1) and so must be a(n-1).

FORMULA

a(n)=a(n-1)+10^(n-1)*(4-[a(n-1)/2^(n-1) mod 2]) i.e. a(n) ends with a(n-1).

CROSSREFS

Cf. A050620, A050621, A050622, A023402.

Sequence in context: A074751 A129551 A081078 this_sequence A030987 A043039 A002754

Adjacent sequences: A035011 A035012 A035013 this_sequence A035015 A035016 A035017

KEYWORD

nonn,base

AUTHOR

J. Lowell (jhbubby(AT)avana.net)

EXTENSIONS

Corrected and extended by Patrick De Geest (pdg(AT)worldofnumbers.com), Jun 15 1999.

Formula, proof of conjecture and more terms from Henry Bottomley (se16(AT)btinternet.com), Feb 14 2000

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Last modified November 30 13:13 EST 2009. Contains 167758 sequences.


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