Logo

Greetings from The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences!

Hints

Search: id:A046035
Displaying 1-1 of 1 results found. page 1
     Format: long | short | internal | text      Sort: relevance | references | number      Highlight: on | off
A046035 Numbers n such that the concatenation of the first n primes (A019518) is a prime. +0
10
1, 2, 4, 128, 174, 342, 435, 1429 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,2

COMMENT

The primes themselves (A069151) are also called Smarandache-Wellin primes.

No others with n <= 10400. Eric Weisstein, (eric(AT)weisstein.com), Mar 01, 2004

REFERENCES

R. Crandall and C. Pomerance, Prime Numbers: A Computational Perspective, Springer, NY, 2001; see p. 72. [The 2002 printing states incorrectly that 719 is a term.]

LINKS

Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Link to a section of The World of Mathematics.

M. Fleuren, Smarandache Concatenated Primes.

M. Fleuren, Smarandache Concatenated Primes.

Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Integer Sequence Primes

EXAMPLE

4 is a term since 2357 is a prime. [Corrected by Ed Murphy (emurphy42(AT)socal.rr.com), May 15 2007]

MATHEMATICA

a = ""; Do[a = StringJoin[a, ToString[ Prime[n]]]; If[ PrimeQ[ ToExpression[a ]], Print[n]], {n, 1, 1429}]

CROSSREFS

Cf. A019518, A033308, A069151. A046284(n) = prime(a(n)).

Adjacent sequences: A046032 A046033 A046034 this_sequence A046036 A046037 A046038

Sequence in context: A006314 A009595 A018493 this_sequence A134710 A009073 A012561

KEYWORD

nonn,base,nice

AUTHOR

Eric Weisstein (eric(AT)weisstein.com)

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 October 5 16:50 EDT 2008. Contains 144613 sequences.


AT&T Labs Research