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”).

Values of A109812(k) where A109812(k)/k reaches a new high point.
1

%I #11 Apr 22 2022 17:07:09

%S 1,4,8,16,32,64,96,128,320,512,2048,2304,19922944,41943040,167772160

%N Values of A109812(k) where A109812(k)/k reaches a new high point.

%C The corresponding values of k are given in A352917.

%C This is a subset of A352203.

%C The slow growth of A109812(k)/k (see Examples section) suggests that A109812(k)/k is bounded. That is, it appears there is a constant c (between 3.7 and 4) such that A109812(k) < c*k for all k.

%e Let c(k) denote A109812(k). The first 15 record high-points of c(k)/k are as follows:

%e [c(k)/k, k, c(k), "binary(c(n))"]

%e [1.000000000, 1, 1, "1"]

%e [1.333333333, 3, 4, "100"]

%e [1.600000000, 5, 8, "1000"]

%e [2.000000000, 8, 16, "10000"]

%e [2.133333333, 15, 32, "100000"]

%e [2.206896552, 29, 64, "1000000"]

%e [2.400000000, 40, 96, "1100000"]

%e [2.560000000, 50, 128, "10000000"]

%e [2.962962963, 108, 320, "101000000"]

%e [3.121951220, 164, 512, "1000000000"]

%e [3.155624037, 649, 2048, "100000000000"]

%e [3.539170507, 651, 2304, "100100000000"]

%e [3.616182275, 5509386, 19922944, "1001100000000000000000000"]

%e [3.721304271, 11271059, 41943040, "10100000000000000000000000"]

%e [3.727433952, 45010096, 167772160, "1010000000000000000000000000"]

%e The values of k and c(k) form A352917 and the present sequence.

%Y Cf. A109812, A352203, A352204, A352917.

%K nonn,more

%O 1,2

%A _David Broadhurst_, Aug 17 2022 (entry created by _N. J. A. Sloane_, Apr 21 2022)