|
Search: id:A060355
|
|
|
| A060355 |
|
Numbers n such that n and n+1 are a pair of consecutive powerful numbers. |
|
+0 5
|
|
| 8, 288, 675, 9800, 12167, 235224, 332928, 465124, 1825200, 11309768, 384199200, 592192224, 4931691075, 5425069447, 13051463048, 221322261600, 443365544448, 865363202000, 8192480787000, 11968683934831, 13325427460800
(list; graph; listen)
|
|
|
OFFSET
|
1,1
|
|
|
COMMENT
|
"Erdos conjectured in 1975 that there do not exist three consecutive powerful integers." - Guy
1825200 belongs to the sequence because 1825200=2.2.2.2.3.3.3.5.5.13.13, 1825201=7.7.193.193=1351^2 and both are powerful numbers. - Labos E. (labos(AT)ana.sote.hu), May 03 2001.
See Guy for Erdos' conjecture and statement that this sequence is infinite. - Jud McCranie (JudMcCr(AT)BellSouth.net), Oct 13 2002
It is easy to see that this sequence is infinite: if n is in the sequence, so is 4n(n+1). [From Franklin T. Adams-Watters (FrankTAW(AT)Netscape.net), Sep 16 2009]
|
|
REFERENCES
|
J.-M. De Koninck, Ces nombres qui nous fascinent, Entry 288, pp 74, Ellipses, Paris 2008.
R. K. Guy, Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, B16
|
|
LINKS
|
C. K. Caldwell, Powerful Numbers
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Powerful numbers
|
|
CROSSREFS
|
Cf. A001694, A060859.
Adjacent sequences: A060352 A060353 A060354 this_sequence A060356 A060357 A060358
Sequence in context: A079929 A136364 A089670 this_sequence A060859 A054607 A132592
|
|
KEYWORD
|
nonn
|
|
AUTHOR
|
Jason Earls (zevi_35711(AT)yahoo.com), Apr 01 2001
|
|
EXTENSIONS
|
Corrected and extended by Jud McCranie (j.mccranie(AT)comcast.net), Jul 08 2001
More terms from Jud McCranie (JudMcCr(AT)BellSouth.net), Oct 13 2002
|
|
|
Search completed in 0.002 seconds
|