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Revision History for A341759 (Underlined text is an addition; strikethrough text is a deletion.)

Showing entries 1-10 | older changes
A341759 Primes p such that Euler(p, 1) is an integer multiple of Bernoulli(p + 1, 1).
(history; published version)
#38 by Harvey P. Dale at Sun Nov 06 17:48:59 EST 2022
STATUS

editing

approved

#37 by Harvey P. Dale at Sun Nov 06 17:48:55 EST 2022
MATHEMATICA

Select[Prime[Range[30000]], Divisible[EulerE[#, 1], BernoulliB[#+1]]&]//Quiet (* Harvey P. Dale, Nov 06 2022 *)

STATUS

approved

editing

#36 by Peter Luschny at Tue Oct 19 07:29:33 EDT 2021
STATUS

reviewed

approved

#35 by Amiram Eldar at Tue Oct 19 05:40:30 EDT 2021
STATUS

proposed

reviewed

#34 by Bill McEachen at Mon Oct 18 17:52:51 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

proposed

#33 by Bill McEachen at Mon Oct 18 17:52:10 EDT 2021
COMMENTS

a(n)+1Primes p such appearsthat top+1 beis a subsequenceterm of A014741. - Bill McEachen, Sep 20 2021

STATUS

proposed

editing

Discussion
Mon Oct 18 17:52
Bill McEachen: Done, thank you.
#32 by Bill McEachen at Mon Oct 18 12:45:15 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

proposed

Discussion
Mon Oct 18 15:13
Omar E. Pol: You said that a(n)+1 appears to be a subsequence ... But in the OEIS a(n) is the n-th term of a sequence, not a sequence.
15:58
Amiram Eldar: I suggest: "Primes p such that p+1 is a term of A014741". It does not involve "n" and it is stronger than just saying "subsequence".
#31 by Bill McEachen at Mon Oct 18 12:44:05 EDT 2021
COMMENTS

a(n) equals)+1 appears to thebe primea formedsubsequence fromof A014741(m)-1. - Bill McEachen, Sep 20 2021

STATUS

proposed

editing

Discussion
Mon Oct 18 12:45
Bill McEachen: I altered the comment, using "appears to be" due to the limited # of terms.
#30 by Bill McEachen at Tue Sep 21 09:32:52 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

proposed

Discussion
Tue Sep 21 20:38
Jon E. Schoenfield: Thanks, that's better ... but what's "m"?
21:46
Bill McEachen: "m" is just to distinguish from "n", so as to not imply a(3) stems from A014741(3) for example.
Wed Sep 29 00:38
Jon E. Schoenfield: I don't understand.  Is there any one-to-one correspondence between terms in this sequence terms in A014741.
15:16
Bill McEachen: Jon:  A341759(0 thru 6) stem from A014741(3,4,5,6,9,13,20).   I didn't look for any eq'n for the pointer mapping.  It's just wherever each A014741(*)-1 is prime
23:45
Jon E. Schoenfield: @Editors -- I'm sure there's a better way to state this, but I'm having trouble finding it.  Would something like "a(n) is the n-th prime in {A014741(n)-1}" work?  Or "Sequence consists of the primes that result from subtracting 1 from each term in A014741"?
Thu Oct 07 04:58
Amiram Eldar: I would simply say that "a(n)+1 is a subsequence of A014741", or "a(n)+1 is the subsequence of the prime terms of A014741" (if the second option is true).
Fri Oct 15 14:00
Bill McEachen: I must check once back from travel …
#29 by Bill McEachen at Tue Sep 21 09:31:47 EDT 2021
COMMENTS

a(n) equals the primesprime formed from A014741(m)-1. - Bill McEachen, Sep 20 2021

STATUS

proposed

editing

Discussion
Tue Sep 21 09:32
Bill McEachen: I adjusted the comment wording

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Last modified August 31 22:14 EDT 2024. Contains 375574 sequences. (Running on oeis4.)