login

Year-end appeal: Please make a donation to the OEIS Foundation to support ongoing development and maintenance of the OEIS. We are now in our 61st year, we have over 378,000 sequences, and we’ve reached 11,000 citations (which often say “discovered thanks to the OEIS”).

A277365
a(n) is the smallest number k such that f(k) = f(n) + f(n+1) and g(k) = g(n) + g(n+1), where f(n) (resp. g(n)) is the number of halving (resp. tripling) steps to reach 1 in the Collatz ('3x+1') problem.
0
2, 6, 12, 20, 34, 49, 56, 72, 98, 112, 144, 176, 196, 228, 224, 272, 344, 406, 392, 384, 448, 520, 576, 688, 688, 772, 913, 912, 912, 1028, 992, 1040, 1220, 1152, 1376, 1624, 1624, 1708, 1624, 1728, 1728, 1824, 2160, 2080, 2080, 2215, 2559, 2752, 2884, 2884, 2752
OFFSET
1,1
COMMENTS
A006666: Number of halving steps to reach 1 in '3x+1' problem.
A006667: Number of tripling steps to reach 1 in '3x+1' problem.
We observe an interesting property: the subsequence {b(i)} of perfect squares is {49, 144, 196, 576, 3844, 12544, 15376, 51529, 61504, 246016, ...} with the property that b(3) = 4*b(1), b(4) = 4*b(2), b(7) = 4*b(5), b(9) = 4*b(7), b(10) = 4*b(9), ...
The primes of the sequence are 2, 2953, 3739, 9931, 38303, 44641, ...
EXAMPLE
a(3) = 12 because (A006666(3), A006667(3)) = (f(3), g(3)) = (5, 2) => f(12) = f(3) + f(4) = 5 + 2 = 7 and g(12) = g(3) + g(4) = 2 + 0 = 2.
MAPLE
nn:=10^6:U:=array(1..nn):V:=array(1..nn):
for i from 1 to nn do:
m:=i:it0:=0:it1:=0:
for j from 1 to nn while(m<>1) do:
if irem(m, 2)=0
then
m:=m/2:it0:=it0+1:
else
m:=3*m+1:it1:=it1+1:
fi:
od:
U[i]:=it0:V[i]:=it1:
od:
for n from 1 to 100 do:
ii:=0:
for k from 1 to nn while(ii=0) do:
if U[k]=U[n]+U[n+1] and V[k]=V[n]+V[n+1]
then
ii:=1:printf(`%d, `, k):
else
fi:
od:
od:
CROSSREFS
Sequence in context: A266194 A194110 A291876 * A184432 A003274 A259470
KEYWORD
nonn
AUTHOR
Michel Lagneau, Oct 11 2016
EXTENSIONS
Name edited by Michel Marcus, Sep 13 2017
STATUS
approved