%I A070151
%S A070151 1,3,2,5,3,10,7,15,12,20,18,5,15,28,22,35,33,13,45,42,7,15,52,30,8,65,
%T A070151 63,40,17,78,77,72,45,68,63,85,57,10,30,105,102,70,42,95,55,110,105,133,
%U A070151 130,12,92,60,153,152,50,143,75,138,13,65,165,27,117,190,150,187,143,70
%N A070151 Consider sequence A002144 of primes congruent to 1 (mod 4) and equal
to x^2 + y^2, with y>x given by A002330 and A002331; sequence gives
values x*y/2.
%H A070151 T. D. Noe, <a href="b070151.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n=1..1000</a>
%F A070151 a(n) = A002330(n+1)*A002331(n+1)/2. - David Wasserman (wasserma(AT)spawar.navy.mil),
May 12 2003
%e A070151 The following table shows the relationship
%e A070151 between several closely related sequences:
%e A070151 Here p = A002144 = primes == 1 mod 4, p = a^2+b^2 with a < b;
%e A070151 a = A002331, b = A002330, t_1 = ab/2 = A070151;
%e A070151 p^2 = c^2+d^2 with c < d; c = A002366, d = A002365,
%e A070151 t_2 = 2ab = A145046, t_3 = b^2-a^2 = A070079,
%e A070151 with {c,d} = {t_2, t_3}, t_4 = cd/2 = ab(b^2-a^2).
%e A070151 ---------------------------------
%e A070151 .p..a..b..t_1..c...d.t_2.t_3..t_4
%e A070151 ---------------------------------
%e A070151 .5..1..2...1...3...4...4...3....6
%e A070151 13..2..3...3...5..12..12...5...30
%e A070151 17..1..4...2...8..15...8..15...60
%e A070151 29..2..5...5..20..21..20..21..210
%e A070151 37..1..6...3..12..35..12..35..210
%e A070151 41..4..5..10...9..40..40...9..180
%e A070151 53..2..7...7..28..45..28..45..630
%e A070151 .................................
%Y A070151 Cf. A002144, A002330, A002331, A144954, A144960.
%Y A070151 Sequence in context: A045766 A132817 A131025 this_sequence A130912 A143956
A110661
%Y A070151 Adjacent sequences: A070148 A070149 A070150 this_sequence A070152 A070153
A070154
%K A070151 easy,nonn
%O A070151 1,2
%A A070151 Lekraj Beedassy (blekraj(AT)yahoo.com), May 06 2002
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