Search: id:A117825 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A117825 %S A117825 1,0,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,7,1,1,1,1,1,1,11,1,1,1,1,1,1,11,13,1,11,1,17,1,1, %T A117825 13,13,1,1,17,1,17,1,1,17,17,17,1,1,19,37,37,1,17,23,1,29,1,1,19,1,19, %U A117825 23,1,19,31,1,19,1,1,1,1,23,1,29,23,23,1,23,71,37,1,1,31,1,23,53,1,31 %N A117825 Distance from n-th highly composite number (cf. A002182) to nearest prime. %C A117825 a) Conjecture: entries > 1 will always be prime. The entry will be larger than the largest prime factor of the highly composite number. %C A117825 b) Will 1 always be the most common entry? %C A117825 c) While a prime may always located close to each highly composite number, is the converse false? %C A117825 d) Is there always a prime between successive highly composite numbers? %H A117825 Charles Greathouse IV, Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..19999 %H A117825 Graeme McRae, Highly Composite Numbers %H A117825 Wikipedia, Highly Composite Numbers. %H A117825 Wikipedia, Divisor Function (sigma). %H A117825 Wikimedia Commons, Alternate plot %e A117825 a(5) = abs(12-11)=1. %Y A117825 Sequence in context: A074465 A081229 A109010 this_sequence A010143 A101027 A129408 %Y A117825 Adjacent sequences: A117822 A117823 A117824 this_sequence A117826 A117827 A117828 %K A117825 nonn %O A117825 1,10 %A A117825 Bill McEachen, May 01 2006 %E A117825 More terms from Don Reble (djr(AT)nk.ca), May 02 2006 Search completed in 0.001 seconds