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A096366 Known primitive friendly integers. +0
2
6, 12, 24, 28, 30, 40, 42, 56, 60, 80, 84, 96, 108, 135, 140, 168, 200, 210, 224, 234, 240, 264, 270, 273, 480, 496 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

0,1

COMMENT

There may be other primitive friendly integers within the range of those given, but they have yet to be calculated.

All perfect numbers are 2-primitive-friendly (since they are all products of distinct powers of 2 and distinct Mersenne primes.) [From Daniel Forgues (squid(AT)zensearch.com), Jun 24 2009]

REFERENCES

Anderson, Claude W. and Hickerson, Dean; Advanced Problem 6020, "Friendly Integers", Amer. Math. Monthly, 1977, V84#1p65-6.

Hickerson, Dean; "Re: Friendly number", post to sci.math newsgroup, 2000, available through groups.google.com.

LINKS

Walter Nissen, Home Page (listed in lieu of email address)

Walter Nissen, Primitive Friendly Integers and Exclusive Multiples, 2004 post to NMBRTHRY mailing list

FORMULA

Friends m and n are primitive friendly iff they have no common prime factor of the same multiplicity.

EXAMPLE

While 6 and 28 are not coprime because they share the common factor 2, the factor 2 appears twice in 28 but only once in 6, so they are in the sequence.

CROSSREFS

Cf. A014567, A074902, A095738, A095739.

Sequence in context: A096387 A094185 A074902 this_sequence A061822 A119840 A069171

Adjacent sequences: A096363 A096364 A096365 this_sequence A096367 A096368 A096369

KEYWORD

nonn

AUTHOR

Walter Nissen Jul 01 2004

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Last modified November 29 12:46 EST 2009. Contains 167659 sequences.


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