Logo

Greetings from The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences!

Hints

Search: id:A129551
Displaying 1-1 of 1 results found. page 1
     Format: long | short | internal | text      Sort: relevance | references | number      Highlight: on | off
A129551 Number of ways to place n+2 queens and 2 pawns on an n X n board so that no two queens attack each other. +0
2
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 4, 44, 280, 1304, 12452, 105012, 977664, 9239816, 90776620, 897446092 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,7

LINKS

R. D. Chatham, The N+k Queens Problem Page.

R. D. Chatham, M. Doyle, G. H. Fricke, J. Reitmann, R. D. Skaggs and M. Wolff, Independence and Domination Separation in Chessboard Graphs, Journal of Combinatorial Mathematics and Combinatorial Computing, to appear.

EXAMPLE

a(4)=0 because when 6 queens are placed on a 4 X 4 board, at least two queens will be adjacent and therefore mutually attacking.

CROSSREFS

Cf. A000170, A129552.

Adjacent sequences: A129548 A129549 A129550 this_sequence A129552 A129553 A129554

Sequence in context: A051223 A077435 A074751 this_sequence A081078 A035014 A030987

KEYWORD

more,nonn

AUTHOR

R. Douglas Chatham (d.chatham(AT)moreheadstate.edu), Apr 20 2007

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 16 23:01 EDT 2008. Contains 139884 sequences.


AT&T Labs Research