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A350187
Numbers of multiplicative persistence 8 which are themselves the product of digits of a number.
8
4478976, 784147392, 19421724672, 249143169618, 717233481216
OFFSET
1,1
COMMENTS
The multiplicative persistence of a number mp(n) is the number of times the product of digits function p(n) must be applied to reach a single digit, i.e., A031346(n).
The product of digits function partitions all numbers into equivalence classes. There is a one-to-one correspondence between values in this sequence and equivalence classes of numbers with multiplicative persistence 9.
There are infinitely many numbers with mp of 1 to 11, but the classes of numbers (p(n)) are postulated to be finite for sequences A350181.
Equivalently:
This sequence consists of all numbers A007954(k) such that A031346(k) = 9.
They are the numbers k in A002473 such that A031346(k) = 8.
Or they factor into powers of 2, 3, 5 and 7 exclusively and p(n) goes to a single digit in 8 steps.
Postulated to be finite and complete.
a(6), if it exists, is > 10^20000, and likely > 10^171000.
LINKS
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Multiplicative Persistence
EXAMPLE
4478976 is in this sequence because:
- 4478976 goes to a single digit in 8 steps: 4478976 -> 338688 -> 27648 -> 2688 -> 768 -> 336 -> 54 -> 20 -> 0;
- p(438939648) = p(231928233984) = 4478976.
CROSSREFS
Intersection of A002473 and A046517.
Cf. A003001 (smallest number with multiplicative persistence n), A031346 (multiplicative persistence), A031347 (multiplicative digital root), A046517 (all numbers with mp of 8).
Cf. A350180, A350181, A350182, A350183, A350184, A350185, A350186 (numbers with mp 1 to 7 and 9 to 10 that are themselves 7-smooth numbers).
Sequence in context: A237910 A244575 A105649 * A015337 A339536 A319064
KEYWORD
nonn,base,more
AUTHOR
Daniel Mondot, Jan 30 2022
STATUS
approved