Search: id:A060261 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A060261 %S A060261 257,379,811,971,1097,1217,2411,2539,2617,3011,4051,5297,5657,6211, %T A060261 6337,6659,6857,8647,8807,10457,10651,10687,10937,11731,11939,12451, %U A060261 12577,13099,14011,14537,14731,14887,15137,15607,15737,16091,16411 %N A060261 Denoting 5 consecutive primes by p, q, r, s and t, these are the values of q such that q, r and s have 10 as a primitive root, but p and t do not. %C A060261 A prime p has 10 as a primitive root iff the length of the period of the decimal expansion of 1/p is p-1. %t A060261 test[p_] := MultiplicativeOrder[10, p]===p-1; Prime/@Select[Range[2, 2500], test[Prime[ # ]]&&test[Prime[ #+1]]&&test[Prime[ #+2]]&&!test[Prime[ #-1]]&&!test[Prime[ #+3]]&] %Y A060261 The indices of these primes are in A060260. Cf. A001913, A002371, A060259, A060262. %Y A060261 Sequence in context: A060879 A062382 A105345 this_sequence A158231 A070815 A095321 %Y A060261 Adjacent sequences: A060258 A060259 A060260 this_sequence A060262 A060263 A060264 %K A060261 nonn %O A060261 0,1 %A A060261 Jeff Burch (gburch(AT)erols.com), Mar 23 2001 %E A060261 Edited by Dean Hickerson (dean.hickerson(AT)yahoo.com), Jun 17 2002 Search completed in 0.001 seconds