Logo

Greetings from The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences!

Hints

Search: id:A086509
Displaying 1-1 of 1 results found. page 1
     Format: long | short | internal | text      Sort: relevance | references | number      Highlight: on | off
A086509 Numbers n such that p=n^2+2, p+2, p+6, p+8 and p+12 are five consecutive primes. +0
1
3, 32397, 213237, 254577, 1587597, 2305167, 3440307, 5622903, 6067893, 6895953, 7424157, 8304927, 8917707, 8936367 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,1

LINKS

John F. Brennen, Quints.

CROSSREFS

Cf. A086220, A086380, A086381.

Adjacent sequences: A086506 A086507 A086508 this_sequence A086510 A086511 A086512

Sequence in context: A007350 A003839 A030463 this_sequence A068161 A116313 A135760

KEYWORD

easy,nonn

AUTHOR

Zak Seidov (zakseidov(AT)yahoo.com), Sep 09 2003

EXTENSIONS

John F. Brennen gives first 19575 terms of this sequence, n <= 165294372813.

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 May 11 10:28 EDT 2008. Contains 139662 sequences.


AT&T Labs Research