Search: id:A110561 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A110561 %S A110561 1,1,1,3,8,40,180,140,896,72576,604800,6652800,68428800,59304960, %T A110561 726485760,163459296000,2324754432000,39520825344000,640237370572800, %U A110561 579262382899200,10532043325440000,4644631106519040000 %N A110561 Denominators of T(n+1)/n! reduced to lowest terms, where T(n) are the triangular numbers A000217. %C A110561 The exponential generating function of the triangular numbers ws given in Sloane & Plouffe as g(x) = (1 + 2x + (x^2)/2)*e^x = 1 + 3*x + 3*x^2 + (5/3)*x^3 + (5/8)*x^4 + (7/40)*x^5 + (1/896)*x^6 + (11/72576)*x^7 + ... = 1 + 3*x/1! + 6*(x^2)/2! + 10*(x^3)/3! + 15*(x^4)/4! + ... %D A110561 Sloane, N. J. A. and Plouffe, S. The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. San Diego, CA: Academic Press, 1995, p. 9. %H A110561 Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Triangular Number. %F A110561 A110560(n)/A110561(n) is the n-th coefficient of the exponential generating function of T(n), the triangular numbers A000217. %e A110561 a(3) = 3 because T(3+1)/3! = T(4)/3! = (4*5/2)/(1*2*3) = 10/6 = 5/3 so the fraction has denominator 3 and numerator A110560(3) = 5. Furthermore, the 3rd term of the exponential generating function of the triangular numbers is (5/3)*x^3. %t A110561 T[n_] := n*(n + 1)/2; Table[Denominator[T[n + 1]/n! ], {n, 0, 21}] %Y A110561 Numerator = A110560. %Y A110561 Closely related to this is T(n)/n! which is A090585/A090586. %Y A110561 Sequence in context: A108262 A034892 A072687 this_sequence A107991 A007175 A152394 %Y A110561 Adjacent sequences: A110558 A110559 A110560 this_sequence A110562 A110563 A110564 %K A110561 easy,frac,nonn %O A110561 0,4 %A A110561 Jonathan Vos Post (jvospost3(AT)gmail.com), Jul 27 2005 %E A110561 Extended by Ray Chandler (rayjchandler(AT)sbcglobal.net), Jul 27 2005 Search completed in 0.001 seconds