|
Search: id:A091365
|
|
|
| A091365 |
|
Primes p such that the sum of the digits of p is not prime, but the sum of the cubes of the digits of p is prime. |
|
+0 4
|
|
| 997, 2797, 3499, 4993, 7297, 7477, 7927, 8089, 8999, 9277, 9349, 9439, 9907, 11689, 12697, 12967, 14479, 14767, 14929, 14947, 16189, 16477, 16729, 16747, 16927, 16981, 17449, 17467, 18169, 18691, 19249, 19267, 19429, 19447, 19681, 19861
(list; graph; listen)
|
|
|
OFFSET
|
1,1
|
|
|
COMMENT
|
Apparently if the cubes of the digits of a prime sum to a prime, it is more likely that the digits themselves also sum to a prime. In the first 10,000 primes there are 1969 primes p such that the cubes of the digits of p sum to a prime. Of these, only 358 are such that the sums of the digits are not prime. Interestingly, all of these primes have a digit sum of 25 or 35. Essentially this sequence is the terms of A091366 (primes whose digits cubed sum to a prime) that do not also appear in A046704 (primes whose digits sum to a prime).
|
|
EXAMPLE
|
a(1)=997 because 9+9+7 = 25 which is not prime, but 9^3+9^3+7^3 = 1801 which is prime.
|
|
CROSSREFS
|
Cf. A046704 (primes whose digits sum to a prime) A091366 (primes whose digits squared sum to a prime).
Adjacent sequences: A091362 A091363 A091364 this_sequence A091366 A091367 A091368
Sequence in context: A057698 A106763 A091362 this_sequence A043527 A117720 A110401
|
|
KEYWORD
|
base,nonn
|
|
AUTHOR
|
Chuck Seggelin (barkeep(AT)plastereddragon.com), Jan 03 2004
|
|
|
Search completed in 0.002 seconds
|