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Search: id:A110074
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| A110074 |
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Numbers n such that sigma(n)=2n-3*phi(phi(n)). |
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+0 2
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| 7, 13, 19, 37, 73, 97, 109, 163, 193, 369, 433, 487, 577, 769, 1153, 1297, 1459, 2593, 2917, 3457, 3889, 10369, 12289, 17497, 18433, 39367, 52489, 139969, 147457, 209953, 331777, 472393, 629857, 746497, 786433, 839809, 995329, 1179649
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OFFSET
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1,1
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COMMENT
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Each prime number p of the form 2^k*3^j+1 where k & j are natural numbers is in the sequence because 2p-3*phi(phi(p))=2p-3*phi (2^k*3^j)=2p-3*(1-1/2)*(1-1/3)*2^k*3^j=2p-2^k*3^j=p+1=sigma(p). Conjecture: The sequence is infinite and 369 is the only composite term. I checked the validity of this conjecture up to 1.5*10^9.
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EXAMPLE
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369 is in the sequence because 2*369-3*phi(phi(369))=546=13*42 =sigma(9)*sigma(41)=sigma(9*41)=sigma(369).
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MATHEMATICA
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Do[If[DivisorSigma[1, m] == 2m - 3EulerPhi[EulerPhi[m]], Print[m]], {m, 1500000}]
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CROSSREFS
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Cf. A110073.
Sequence in context: A059640 A059643 A040034 this_sequence A058383 A005471 A040096
Adjacent sequences: A110071 A110072 A110073 this_sequence A110075 A110076 A110077
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KEYWORD
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easy,nonn
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AUTHOR
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Farideh Firoozbakht (mymontain(AT)yahoo.com), Jul 25 2005
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