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A141842 a(n) = first term that can be reduced in n steps via repeated interpretation of a(n) as a base b+1 number where b is the largest digit of a(n), such that b is always 8 so that each interpretation is base 9. Terms already fully reduced (i.e. single digits) are excluded. +0
7
18, 86, 680, 835, 7087, 12788, 18478, 128117, 385732, 2206280, 13176873, 33185141, 68388408, 335213686, 1365888758 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,1

COMMENT

It is sometimes possible to compute additional terms by taking the last term, treating it as base 10 and converting to base 9. This may create a term minimally interprettable as base 9 which can converted back to base 10 yielding the previous term in the sequence which will itself yield N further terms. But there is no guarantee (except in base 2) that the term so derived will be the first term to produce a sequence of N+1 terms. There could be another, smaller, term which satisfies that requirement but which uses different terms. Pushing the last term of this sequence does not produce a value minimally interprettable as base 9.

EXAMPLE

a(3) = 680 because 680 is the first number that can produce a sequence of three terms by repeated interpetation as a base 9 number: [680] (base-9) --> [558] (base-9) --> [458] (base-9) --> [377]. Since 377 cannot be minimally interpretted as a base 9 number, the sequence terminates with 458. a(1) = 18 because 18 is the first number that can be reduced once, yielding no further terms minimally interprettable as base 9.

CROSSREFS

Cf. A091049, A141836, A141837, A141838, A141839, A141840, A141841.

Adjacent sequences: A141839 A141840 A141841 this_sequence A141843 A141844 A141845

Sequence in context: A067984 A124935 A126405 this_sequence A063788 A066854 A059138

KEYWORD

base,more,nonn

AUTHOR

Chuck Seggelin (seqfan(AT)plastereddragon.com), Jul 10 2008

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Last modified November 9 12:23 EST 2009. Contains 166233 sequences.


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