mersenneforum.org  

Go Back   mersenneforum.org > Fun Stuff > Puzzles

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 2020-10-12, 14:24   #12
Dr Sardonicus
 
Dr Sardonicus's Avatar
 
Feb 2017
Nowhere

11001000010012 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by R2357 View Post
Here goes, what do pi and the prime number sequence have in common (apart from pi's usage in the prime counting function and in the Gapcoin symbol)?
Depends what you mean by "in common." The number pi and the sequence of primes are both mathematical concepts, so they have that in common.

Although not something "in common," the following identity does give a connection between pi and the primes.

\zeta(2k)\;=\;\frac{(-1)^{k+1}B_{2k}(2\pi)^{2k}}{2(2k)!}

where B2k is a Bernoulli number.

Since the zeta values tend to 1 as k increases, this identity clearly indicates how fast the Bernoulli numbers increase.

By the Euler product formula,

\zeta(2k)\;=\sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{n^{2k}}\;=\prod_{p prime}(1\;-\;p^{-2k})^{-1}

Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2020-10-12 at 14:25 Reason: relocate sentence
Dr Sardonicus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 14:39   #13
R2357
 
"Ruben"
Oct 2020
Nederland

2×19 Posts
Default

I meant that the last digit to occur in both, after all the others already occured is 0
R2357 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 14:45   #14
kruoli
 
kruoli's Avatar
 
"Oliver"
Sep 2017
Porta Westfalica, DE

23×71 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by R2357 View Post
What do the numbers 3, 4, 5, 9, 10 and 15 have in common?
A few days ago, inspired by your username, I implemented a search for those numbers, not knowing that 217040 already existed. I then tried a reverse search with my results, but it failed. So my results have two extra entries up to base 10,000:

Code:
Base   3: 2: PRIME
Base   4: 11: PRIME
Base   5: 13: PRIME
Base   9: 1753: PRIME
Base  10: 2357: PRIME
Base  15: 1689253: PRP
Base  30: 1381634376893: PRP
Base 244: 28053100326775557991040317463038978786222621912035656410548777019058410902967286473295967973013822496644381234187139444081933: PRP
Base 676: 5315512989556603852873960767599554802770217878668020639087299338491156364777624078216225481953314889906416405260185946717596817192222631893348352843296815623256539192116715852938204396771410495745825850415512817745323160064190785403596966251903413339560196993352297473618262854362429132930982141489639972093336215001054282483833934391405974661: PRP
Base 908: 774253167992829066544897022900803876521834801951506297558501436443754805658452155038606354553711608434818871357021885486538136267223941008557077136840630016149444258651378366264186840692518095028210114290149037111207053828312230815317283218154106634363766516912291180016347613190975638154063456737387762950562305089646451132355346897253623075248726702532368645356588615208550106471096051303922403902187226965975405164795025681172388691682609981655338411: PRP
Are these the correct values or is OEIS wrong? The ones marked as "PRP" are proven primes in FactorDB.
kruoli is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 14:48   #15
Dr Sardonicus
 
Dr Sardonicus's Avatar
 
Feb 2017
Nowhere

13·17·29 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by R2357 View Post
I meant that the last digit to occur in both, after all the others already occured is 0
Not in base three, it isn't...
Dr Sardonicus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 14:58   #16
R2357
 
"Ruben"
Oct 2020
Nederland

2×19 Posts
Default OEIS

Quote:
Originally Posted by kruoli View Post
A few days ago, inspired by your username, I implemented a search for those numbers, not knowing that 217040 already existed. I then tried a reverse search with my results, but it failed. So my results have two extra entries up to base 10,000:

Code:
Base   3: 2: PRIME
Base   4: 11: PRIME
Base   5: 13: PRIME
Base   9: 1753: PRIME
Base  10: 2357: PRIME
Base  15: 1689253: PRP
Base  30: 1381634376893: PRP
Base 244: 28053100326775557991040317463038978786222621912035656410548777019058410902967286473295967973013822496644381234187139444081933: PRP
Base 676: 5315512989556603852873960767599554802770217878668020639087299338491156364777624078216225481953314889906416405260185946717596817192222631893348352843296815623256539192116715852938204396771410495745825850415512817745323160064190785403596966251903413339560196993352297473618262854362429132930982141489639972093336215001054282483833934391405974661: PRP
Base 908: 774253167992829066544897022900803876521834801951506297558501436443754805658452155038606354553711608434818871357021885486538136267223941008557077136840630016149444258651378366264186840692518095028210114290149037111207053828312230815317283218154106634363766516912291180016347613190975638154063456737387762950562305089646451132355346897253623075248726702532368645356588615208550106471096051303922403902187226965975405164795025681172388691682609981655338411: PRP
Are these the correct values or is OEIS wrong? The ones marked as "PRP" are proven primes in FactorDB.
I don't know about the last one but fore base 30, I checked and it seems that OEIS is right, it's not prime.
R2357 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 15:00   #17
R2357
 
"Ruben"
Oct 2020
Nederland

3810 Posts
Default

How did you get the result for b=30, I didn't get the same.
R2357 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 15:02   #18
R2357
 
"Ruben"
Oct 2020
Nederland

2×19 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr Sardonicus View Post
Not in base three, it isn't...
Sorry, I should have written base 10
R2357 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 15:13   #19
R2357
 
"Ruben"
Oct 2020
Nederland

3810 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sweety439 View Post
They are all divisors of 360 (the number of degrees in a turn)
Yes, but that wasn't what I had in mind, it's already been found.
R2357 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 15:29   #20
R2357
 
"Ruben"
Oct 2020
Nederland

2×19 Posts
Default

Kruoli, for b=30, I found 41449031306819
R2357 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 15:34   #21
Dr Sardonicus
 
Dr Sardonicus's Avatar
 
Feb 2017
Nowhere

13·17·29 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by kruoli View Post
<snip>
Code:
Base  30: 1381634376893: PRP
<snip>
Base 908: 77425316799...
<snip>
For base 30, you only concatenated the primes up to 23. You missed the prime 29.

Likewise for 908, you missed the prime 907.

Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2020-10-12 at 15:41 Reason: Add additional info
Dr Sardonicus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2020-10-12, 16:05   #22
kruoli
 
kruoli's Avatar
 
"Oliver"
Sep 2017
Porta Westfalica, DE

23·71 Posts
Default

Thanks, I found the error in my code...

kruoli is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
More than just a puzzle storm5510 Puzzles 5 2020-10-07 14:14
Some puzzle Harrywill Puzzles 4 2017-05-03 05:10
A well-known puzzle... mart_r Puzzles 31 2009-04-09 22:51
Dot puzzle nibble4bits Puzzles 37 2006-02-27 09:35
now HERE'S a puzzle. Orgasmic Troll Puzzles 6 2005-12-08 07:19

All times are UTC. The time now is 04:04.


Fri Jul 7 04:04:24 UTC 2023 up 323 days, 1:32, 0 users, load averages: 2.01, 1.51, 1.29

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

This forum has received and complied with 0 (zero) government requests for information.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
A copy of the license is included in the FAQ.

≠ ± ∓ ÷ × · − √ ‰ ⊗ ⊕ ⊖ ⊘ ⊙ ≤ ≥ ≦ ≧ ≨ ≩ ≺ ≻ ≼ ≽ ⊏ ⊐ ⊑ ⊒ ² ³ °
∠ ∟ ° ≅ ~ ‖ ⟂ ⫛
≡ ≜ ≈ ∝ ∞ ≪ ≫ ⌊⌋ ⌈⌉ ∘ ∏ ∐ ∑ ∧ ∨ ∩ ∪ ⨀ ⊕ ⊗ 𝖕 𝖖 𝖗 ⊲ ⊳
∅ ∖ ∁ ↦ ↣ ∩ ∪ ⊆ ⊂ ⊄ ⊊ ⊇ ⊃ ⊅ ⊋ ⊖ ∈ ∉ ∋ ∌ ℕ ℤ ℚ ℝ ℂ ℵ ℶ ℷ ℸ 𝓟
¬ ∨ ∧ ⊕ → ← ⇒ ⇐ ⇔ ∀ ∃ ∄ ∴ ∵ ⊤ ⊥ ⊢ ⊨ ⫤ ⊣ … ⋯ ⋮ ⋰ ⋱
∫ ∬ ∭ ∮ ∯ ∰ ∇ ∆ δ ∂ ℱ ℒ ℓ
𝛢𝛼 𝛣𝛽 𝛤𝛾 𝛥𝛿 𝛦𝜀𝜖 𝛧𝜁 𝛨𝜂 𝛩𝜃𝜗 𝛪𝜄 𝛫𝜅 𝛬𝜆 𝛭𝜇 𝛮𝜈 𝛯𝜉 𝛰𝜊 𝛱𝜋 𝛲𝜌 𝛴𝜎𝜍 𝛵𝜏 𝛶𝜐 𝛷𝜙𝜑 𝛸𝜒 𝛹𝜓 𝛺𝜔