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A053816 Another version of the Kaprekar numbers: n such that n=q+r and n^2=q*10^m+r, for some m >= 1, q>=0 and 0<=r<10^m, with n != 10^a, a>=1. Here q and r must both be m-digit numbers. +0
2
1, 9, 45, 55, 99, 297, 703, 999, 2223, 2728, 4950, 5050, 7272, 7777, 9999, 17344, 22222, 77778, 82656, 95121, 99999, 142857, 148149, 181819, 187110, 208495, 318682, 329967, 351352, 356643, 390313, 461539, 466830, 499500, 500500, 533170 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,2

COMMENT

Consider an m-digit number n. Square it and add the right m digits to the left m or m-1 digits. If the resultant sum is n, then n is a term of the sequence.

4879 and 5292 are in A006886 but not in this version.

REFERENCES

D. Kaprekar, On Kaprekar numbers, J. Rec. Math., 13 (1980-1981), 81-82.

D. Wells, The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers. Penguin Books, NY, 1986, 151.

LINKS

D. E. Iannucci, The Kaprekar numbers, J. Integer Sequences, Vol. 3, 2000, #1.2.

Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Link to a section of The World of Mathematics.

R. Munafo, Kaprekar Sequences

EXAMPLE

703 is Kaprekar because 703=494+209, 703^2=494209.

CROSSREFS

Cf. A037042, A053394, A053395, A053396, A053397, A045913, A003052.

Sequence in context: A087969 A044111 A006886 this_sequence A044492 A067536 A139609

Adjacent sequences: A053813 A053814 A053815 this_sequence A053817 A053818 A053819

KEYWORD

nonn,nice,base,easy

AUTHOR

mrob(AT)mrob.com (Robert P Munafo)

EXTENSIONS

More terms from Michel ten Voorde (seqfan(AT)tenvoorde.org) Apr 11 2001

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Last modified November 25 20:09 EST 2009. Contains 167514 sequences.


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