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A136106 a(n) = smallest prime p such that in the sequence of n numbers p, p+1, p+2, ..., p+n-1, the i-th terms is the product of i distinct primes, for i = 1, ..., n. +0
1
2, 5, 103, 1867, 491851, 17681491, 35565206671 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,1

FORMULA

a(n) >= A086560(n). - R. J. Mathar (mathar(AT)strw.leidenuniv.nl), Feb 05 2008

EXAMPLE

a(4)=1867 because it begins with the prime 1867 (considered as just one divisor) followed by 1868 with two prime factors, 2 and 467; then 1869 with three prime factors, 3, 7, 89; then 1870 with four prime factors, 2, 5, 11,17.

PROGRAM

(PARI) /* a brute force program */ a136106(st, ed, ct)={ forprime(x=st, ed, if ((x%6)!=1, next); goodFlag = 1; c = 1; while(goodFlag, if (!(c%2) && isprime(x+c), goodFlag=0, v = factor(x+c); if (length(v[, 2]) == c+1, c+=1; if (c > ct, print("Level = ", c, " at ", x+c-1, "=", v); ct+=1), goodFlag = 0 ) ) ) ); } -Fred Schneider (frederick.william.schneider(AT)gmail.com), Dec 18 2007

CROSSREFS

Cf. A072875.

Sequence in context: A066618 A027720 A132482 this_sequence A122696 A023263 A070855

Adjacent sequences: A136103 A136104 A136105 this_sequence A136107 A136108 A136109

KEYWORD

easy,more,nonn

AUTHOR

Enoch Haga (Enokh(AT)comcast.net), Dec 14 2007

EXTENSIONS

Edited by N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com), Dec 23 2007

2 more terms from Fred Schneider (frederick.william.schneider(AT)gmail.com), Dec 18 2007

a(7) from Donovan Johnson (donovan.johnson(AT)yahoo.com), Sep 19 2009

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


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