OFFSET
1,1
COMMENTS
Numbers whose square is decomposable in 19 different ways into the sum of two nonzero squares: these are those with exactly two distinct prime divisors of the form 4k+1 with one, and six respective multiplicities, or with only one prime divisor of this form with multiplicity nineteen.
LINKS
Ray Chandler, Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..10000 (first 1000 terms from Hamdi Sahloul)
FORMULA
EXAMPLE
a(1) = 203125 = 5^6*13, a(5) = 531250 = 2*5^6*17, a(281) = 12796875 = 3^2*5^6*7*13.
MATHEMATICA
r[a_]:={b, c}/.{ToRules[Reduce[0<b<c && a^2 == b^2 + c^2, {b, c}, Integers]]}; Select[Range[12796875], Length[r[#]] == 19 &] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Mar 01 2016 *)
CROSSREFS
Cf. A004144 (0), A084645 (1), A084646 (2), A084647 (3), A084648 (4), A084649 (5), A097219 (6), A097101 (7), A290499 (8), A290500 (9), A097225 (10), A290501 (11), A097226 (12), A097102 (13), A290502 (14), A290503 (15), A097238 (16), A097239 (17), A290504 (18), A097103 (22), A097244 (31), A097245 (37), A097282 (40), A097626 (67).
KEYWORD
nonn
AUTHOR
Hamdi Sahloul, Aug 04 2017
STATUS
approved