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A372007 a(n) = product of those prime(k) such that floor(n/prime(k)) is even. 2
1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 6, 2, 5, 5, 30, 30, 105, 7, 14, 14, 21, 21, 210, 10, 55, 55, 330, 66, 429, 143, 2002, 2002, 15015, 15015, 30030, 910, 7735, 221, 1326, 1326, 12597, 323, 3230, 3230, 33915, 33915, 746130, 49742, 572033, 572033, 3432198, 490314, 1225785, 24035 (list; graph; refs; listen; history; text; internal format)
OFFSET
1,4
COMMENTS
The only primes in the sequence are 2, 3, 5, and 7.
LINKS
Michael De Vlieger, Plot prime(i) | a(n) at (x,y) = (n,i) for n = 1..2048, 12X vertical exaggeration.
Michael De Vlieger, "Tiger Stripe" Factors of Primorials, ResearchGate, 2024.
FORMULA
a(n) = A034386(n) / A372000(n).
a(n) = Product_{k = 1..pi(n)} Product_{j = 1+floor(n/(2*k+1))..floor(n/(2*k))} prime(j), where pi(x) = A000720(n).
EXAMPLE
a(1) = 1 since n = 1 is the empty product.
a(2) = 1 since for n = 2, floor(n/p) = floor(2/2) = 1 is odd.
a(3) = 1 since for n = 3 and p = 2, floor(3/2) = 1 is odd, and for p = 3, floor(3/3) = 1 is odd.
a(4) = 2 since for n = 4 and p = 2, floor(4/2) = 2 is even, but for p = 3, floor(4/3) = 1 is odd. Therefore, a(4) = 2.
a(5) = 2 since for n = 5, though floor(5/2) = 2 is even, floor(5/3) and floor(5/5) are both odd. Therefore, a(5) = 2.
a(8) = 6 since for n = 8, both floor(8/2) and floor(8/3) are even, but both floor(8/5) and floor(8/7) are odd. Therefore, a(8) = 2*3 = 6, etc.
Table relating a(n) with b(n), s(n), and t(n), diagramming prime factors with "x" that produce a(n) or b(n), or powers of 2 with "x" that sum to s(n) or t(n). Sequences b(n) = A372000(n), c(n) = A034386(n), s(n) = A371907(n), t(n) = A371906(n), and v(n) = A357215(n) = s(n) + t(n). Column A represents prime factors of a(n), B same of b(n), while column S (at bottom) shows powers of 2 that sum to s(n), with T same for t(n). P(n) = A002110(n).
[A] [B] 11
n 2357 a(n) 235713 b(n) c(n) s(n) t(n) v(n)
--------------------------------------------------------
1 . 1 . 1 P(0) 0 0 2^0-1
2 . 1 x 2 P(1) 0 1 2^1-1
3 . 1 xx 6 P(2) 0 3 2^2-1
4 x 2 .x 3 P(2) 1 2 2^2-1
5 x 2 .xx 15 P(3) 1 6 2^3-1
6 .x 3 x.x 10 P(3) 2 5 2^3-1
7 .x 3 x.xx 70 P(4) 2 13 2^4-1
8 xx 6 ..xx 35 P(4) 3 12 2^4-1
9 x 2 .xxx 105 P(4) 1 14 2^4-1
10 ..x 5 xx.x 42 P(4) 4 11 2^4-1
11 ..x 5 xx.xx 462 P(5) 4 27 2^5-1
12 xxx 30 ...xx 77 P(5) 7 24 2^5-1
13 xxx 30 ...xxx 1001 P(6) 7 56 2^6-1
14 .xxx 105 x...xx 286 P(6) 14 49 2^6-1
15 ...x 7 xxx.xx 4290 P(6) 8 55 2^6-1
16 x..x 14 .xx.xx 2145 P(6) 9 54 2^6-1
--------------------------------------------------------
0123 012345
[S] 2^k [T] 2^k
MATHEMATICA
Table[Times @@ Select[Prime@ Range@ PrimePi[n], EvenQ@ Quotient[n, #] &], {n, 51}] (* or *)
Table[Product[Prime[i], {j, PrimePi[n]}, {i, 1 + PrimePi[Floor[n/(2 j + 1)]], PrimePi[Floor[n/(2 j)]]}], {n, 51}]
PROG
(PARI) a(n) = my(vp=primes([1, n])); vecprod(select(x->(((n\x) % 2)==0), vp)); \\ Michel Marcus, Apr 30 2024
CROSSREFS
Sequence in context: A052473 A165122 A240505 * A051715 A143269 A036817
KEYWORD
nonn,easy
AUTHOR
Michael De Vlieger, Apr 17 2024
STATUS
approved

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Last modified June 16 11:25 EDT 2024. Contains 373429 sequences. (Running on oeis4.)