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A352233
Numbers that can be expressed as the sum of two primes in exactly 10 ways.
11
114, 126, 162, 260, 290, 304, 316, 328, 344, 352, 358, 374, 382, 416, 542, 632
OFFSET
1,1
COMMENTS
All terms are even. Conjecture: 632 is the last term. Hardy and Littlewood conjectured a grow rate of the number of decompositions for large even numbers (see Conjecture A in page 32 of Hardy and Littlewood reference), implying this sequence is finite. - Chai Wah Wu, Mar 10 2022
LINKS
G. H. Hardy and J. E. Littlewood, Some problems of 'Partitio numerorum'; III: On the expression of a number as a sum of primes, Acta Mathematica, volume 44, pages 1-70 (1923).
EXAMPLE
114 = 5+109 = 7+107 = 11+103 = 13+101 = 17+97 = 31+83 = 41+73 = 43+71 = 47+67 = 53+61.
MATHEMATICA
c[n_] := Count[IntegerPartitions[n, {2}], _?(And @@ PrimeQ[#] &)]; Select[Range[1000], c[#] == 10 &] (* Amiram Eldar, Mar 08 2022 *)
CROSSREFS
Numbers that can be expressed as the sum of two primes in k ways for k=0..10: A014092 (k=0), A067187 (k=1), A067188 (k=2), A067189 (k=3), A067190 (k=4), A067191 (k=5), A066722 (k=6), A352229 (k=7), A352230 (k=8), A352231 (k=9), this sequence (k=10).
Sequence in context: A228961 A057440 A113537 * A127664 A063991 A292020
KEYWORD
nonn,more
AUTHOR
Wesley Ivan Hurt, Mar 08 2022
STATUS
approved