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Search: id:A064224
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| A064224 |
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Numbers having more than one representation as the product of consecutive integers > 1. |
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+0 5
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| 120, 210, 720, 5040, 175560, 17297280, 19958400, 259459200, 20274183401472000, 25852016738884976640000, 368406749739154248105984000000
(list; graph; listen)
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OFFSET
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1,1
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COMMENT
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Solutions to the equations: x(x+1)...(x+m)=y(y+1)...(y+n) with x>1, y>1.
Some patterns are impossible, e.g. x(x+1)(x+2)(x+3)=y(y+1) has been proved impossible.
The early terms in this sequence each have two representations. Is two the maximum possible? The sequence is infinite: for any n, the number n*(n+1)*...*(n^2+n-1) is in this sequence. The next number of this form is 20274183401472000, which is obtained when n=4. - T. D. Noe (noe(AT)sspectra.com), Nov 22 2004
Using an improved algorithm I have performed an exhaustive search up to 2.15 * 10^33 and can confirm the terms shown above are all that exist up to that point. For any member of A045619 we can construct a member of this sequence by equating n(n+1)(n+2)...(x-1) to (n+2)(n+3)...(x-1)x. Also, as demonstrated in my examples, 5040 is related to 720 as 259459200 is to 210. So we also know that 36055954861352887137197787308347629783163600896000000000 and 6244042313569035223343873483125151604764341428027427022254596874567680000000000000 are terms. - Robert Munafo (mrob27(AT)gmail.com), Aug 17 2007
MacLeod and Barrodale prove that the equation x(x+1)...(x+m-1) = y(y+1)...(y+n-1) has no solutions x>1 and y>1 for the following pairs of (m,n): (2,4), (2,6), (2,8), (2,12), (4,8), (5,10). They also show that (2,3) has two solutions and (3,6) has one solution. They conjecture that (2,k) has no solution for k>3. [From T. D. Noe (noe(AT)sspectra.com), Jul 29 2009]
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REFERENCES
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H. L. Abbott, P. Erdos and D Hanson, On the number of times an integer occurs as a binomial coefficient, Amer. Math. Monthly, Vol. 81, No. 3 (Mar., 1974), 256-261.
R. A. MacLeod and I. Barrodale, On equal products of consecutive integers, Canad. Math. Bull., 13 (1970) 255-259. [From T. D. Noe (noe(AT)sspectra.com), Jul 29 2009]
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LINKS
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Robert Munafo, Page dealing with this sequence
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EXAMPLE
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120 is here because 120 = 2*3*4*5 = 4*5*6.
a(2)=210 because we can write 210=5*6*7 or 14*15. The term a(8) = 259459200 = 5*6*7*8*9*10*11*12*13 = 8*9*10*11*12*13*14*15 is related to 210 by adding the intervening integers (8 through 13) to both products.
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MATHEMATICA
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nn=10^10; t3={}; Do[m=0; p=n; While[m++; p=p(n+m); p<=nn, t3={t3, p}], {n, 2, Sqrt[nn]}]; t3=Sort[Flatten[t3]]; lst={}; Do[If[t3[[i]]==t3[[i+1]], AppendTo[lst, t3[[i]]]], {i, Length[t3]-1}]; Union[lst]
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CROSSREFS
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Cf. A003015 (numbers occurring 5 or more times in Pascal's triangle).
Cf. A002378, A045619.
A163263 (non-overlapping case) [From T. D. Noe (noe(AT)sspectra.com), Jul 29 2009]
Sequence in context: A056994 A114823 A069790 this_sequence A069674 A003015 A098565
Adjacent sequences: A064221 A064222 A064223 this_sequence A064225 A064226 A064227
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KEYWORD
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nonn
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AUTHOR
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Jon Perry (perry(AT)globalnet.co.uk), Sep 22 2001
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EXTENSIONS
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a(1), a(7) and a(8) from T. D. Noe (noe(AT)sspectra.com), Nov 22 2004
a(9) and a(10) from Robert Munafo (mrob27(AT)gmail.com), Aug 13 2007
a(11) from Robert Munafo (mrob27(AT)gmail.com), Aug 17 2007
Edited by N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com), Sep 14 2008 at the suggestion of R. J. Mathar
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