Search: id:A006960 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A006960 M5410 %S A006960 196,887,1675,7436,13783,52514,94039,187088,1067869,10755470,18211171, %T A006960 35322452,60744805,111589511,227574622,454050344,897100798,1794102596, %U A006960 8746117567,16403234045,70446464506,130992928913,450822227944,900544455998, 1800098901007 %N A006960 Reverse and Add! sequence starting with 196. %C A006960 a(1) = 196; a(n+1) = a(n) + a(n)-with-digits-reversed. %D A006960 J.-M. De Koninck, Ces nombres qui nous fascinent, Entry 196, p. 58, Ellipses, Paris 2008. %D A006960 F. Gruenberger, Computer Recreations, Scientific American, 250 (No. 4, 1984), 19-26. %D A006960 R. K. Guy, What's left?, preprint, 1998. %D A006960 Clifford A. Pickover, A Passion for Mathematics, Wiley, 2005; see p. 70. %D A006960 N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence). %H A006960 T. D. Noe, Table of n, a(n) for n=0..200 %H A006960 P. De Geest, Some thematic websources %H A006960 Jason Doucette, World Records %H A006960 T. Irvin, About Two Months of Computing, or An Addendum to Mr. Walker's Three Years of Computing %H A006960 Madras Math's Amazing Number Facts, The Ultimate Palindrome %H A006960 I. Peter, More trajectories %H A006960 Wade VanLandingham, 196 %H A006960 J. Walker, Three Years Of Computing: Final Report On The Palindrome Quest %H A006960 Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Link to a section of The World of Mathematics. %H A006960 Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Link to a section of The World of Mathematics. %H A006960 Index entries for sequences related to Reverse and Add! %t A006960 a = {196}; For[i = 2, i < 26, i++, a = Append[a, a[[i - 1]] + ToExpression[ StringReverse[ToString[a[[i - 1]]]]]]]; a %Y A006960 Cf. A023108, A023109, A033665, A016016. %Y A006960 Sequence in context: A089493 A088753 A063048 this_sequence A014798 A061622 A128990 %Y A006960 Adjacent sequences: A006957 A006958 A006959 this_sequence A006961 A006962 A006963 %K A006960 nonn,base,nice,easy %O A006960 0,1 %A A006960 N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com), Simon Plouffe (simon.plouffe(AT)gmail.com) %E A006960 196 is conjectured to be smallest initial term which does not lead to a palindrome. John Walker, Tim Irvin and others have extended the trajectory of 196 to millions of digits without finding a palindrome. %E A006960 More terms from Vit Planocka (planocka(AT)mistral.cz), Sep 28 2002 Search completed in 0.002 seconds