Logo

Greetings from The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences!

Hints

Search: id:A072255
Displaying 1-1 of 1 results found. page 1
     Format: long | short | internal | text      Sort: relevance | references | number      Highlight: on | off
A072255 Number of ways to partition {1,2,...,n} into arithmetic progressions, where in each partition all the progressions have the same common difference and have lengths greater than or equal to 2. +0
1
1, 1, 3, 4, 7, 11, 19, 29, 47, 76, 125, 200, 322, 519, 845, 1366, 2211, 3573, 5778, 9342, 15122, 24481, 39639, 64094, 103684, 167734, 271397, 439178, 710698 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

2,3

REFERENCES

The question of enumerating these partitions appears as Problem 11005, American Mathematical Monthly, 110, April 2003, page 340.

Problem 11005, American Math. Monthly, Vol. 112, 2005, pp. 89-90. (The published solution is incomplete; the solver's expression q_2(n,d) must be summed over all d = 1,2,...,floor{n/2}.)

LINKS

T. D. Noe, Table of n, a(n) for n=2..500

FORMULA

a(n) = sum_{d=1}^{floor{n/2}} {{F_k}^r}*{F_{k-1}}^{d-r}, where d is the common difference of the arithmetic progressions, k = Floor{n/d}, r = n mod d and F_k is the k-th Fibonacci number (A000045). - Marty Getz (ffmpg1(AT)uaf.edu) and Dixon Jones (fndjj(AT)uaf.edu), May 21 2005

EXAMPLE

a(5)=4: the four ways to partition {1,2,3,4,5} as described above are: {1,2}{3,4,5}; {1,2,3}{4,5}; {1,2,3,4,5}; {1,3,5}{2,4}.

CROSSREFS

A053732 relates to partitions of {1, 2, ..., n} into arithmetic progressions without restrictions on the common difference of the progressions.

Sequence in context: A041739 A042593 A041018 this_sequence A049863 A025068 A049928

Adjacent sequences: A072252 A072253 A072254 this_sequence A072256 A072257 A072258

KEYWORD

easy,nice,nonn

AUTHOR

Marty Getz (ffmpg1(AT)uaf.edu) and Dixon Jones (fndjj(AT)uaf.edu) (fndjj(AT)uaf.edu), Jul 08 2002

page 1

Search completed in 0.002 seconds

Lookup | Welcome | Find friends | Music | Plot 2 | Demos | Index | Browse | More | WebCam
Contribute new seq. or comment | Format | Transforms | Puzzles | Hot | Classics
More pages | Superseeker | Maintained by N. J. A. Sloane (njas@research.att.com)

Last modified December 1 13:27 EST 2009. Contains 167806 sequences.


AT&T Labs Research