Search: id:A051037 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A051037 %S A051037 1,2,3,4,5,6,8,9,10,12,15,16,18,20,24,25,27,30,32,36,40,45,48,50,54,60, %T A051037 64,72,75,80,81,90,96,100,108,120,125,128,135,144,150,160,162,180,192, %U A051037 200,216,225,240,243,250,256,270,288,300,320,324,360,375,384,400,405 %N A051037 5-smooth numbers: i.e. numbers whose prime divisors are all <= 5. %C A051037 Sometimes called the Hamming sequence, since Hamming asked for an efficient algorithm to generate the list, in ascending order, of all numbers of the form 2^i3^j5^k for i,j,k >= 0. The problem was popularized by Edsger Dijkstra. %C A051037 Successive numbers k such that 8 k = EulerPhi[30 k]. [From Artur Jasinski (grafix(AT)csl.pl), Nov 05 2008] %C A051037 Where record values greater than 1 occur in A165704: A165705(n)=A165704(a(n)). [From Reinhard Zumkeller (reinhard.zumkeller(AT)gmail.com), Sep 26 2009] %H A051037 T. D. Noe, Table of n, a(n) for n=1..1000 %H A051037 M. J. Dominus, Infinite Lists in Perl. %H A051037 Sci.math, Ugly numbers %H A051037 Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Link to a section of The World of Mathematics. %H A051037 Wikipedia, Regular number [From Artur Jasinski (grafix(AT)csl.pl), Nov 06 2008] %F A051037 Let s(n)=Card(k | a(k)