Factoriangular number
In number theory, a factoriangular number is an integer formed by adding a factorial and a triangular number with the same index. The name is a portmanteau of "factorial" and "triangular."
Definition
[edit]For , the th factoriangular number, denoted , is defined as the sum of the th factorial and the th triangular number:[1]
- .
The first few factoriangular numbers are:
1 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
2 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
3 | 6 | 6 | 12 |
4 | 24 | 10 | 34 |
5 | 120 | 15 | 135 |
6 | 720 | 21 | 741 |
7 | 5,040 | 28 | 5,068 |
8 | 40,320 | 36 | 40,356 |
9 | 362,880 | 45 | 362,925 |
10 | 3,628,800 | 55 | 3,628,855 |
These numbers form the integer sequence A101292 in the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS).
Properties
[edit]Recurrence relations
[edit]Factoriangular numbers satisfy several recurrence relations. For ,
And for ,
These are linear non-homogeneous recurrence relations with variable coefficients of order 1.
Generating functions
[edit]The exponential generating function for factoriangular numbers is (for )
If the sequence is extended to include , then the exponential generating function becomes
- .
Representations as sums of triangular numbers
[edit]Factoriangular numbers can sometimes be expressed as sums of two triangular numbers:
- if and only if or .
- if and only if is a perfect square. For , the only known solution is , giving .
- if and only if is a sum of two squares.
Representations as sums of squares
[edit]Some factoriangular numbers can be expressed as the sum of two squares. For , the factoriangular numbers that can be written as for some integers and include:
This result is related to the sum of two squares theorem, which states that a positive integer can be expressed as a sum of two squares if and only if its prime factorization contains no prime factor of the form raised to an odd power.
Fibonacci factoriangular numbers
[edit]A Fibonacci factoriangular number is a number that is both a Fibonacci number and a factoriangular number. There are exactly three such numbers:
This result was conjectured by Romer Castillo and later proved by Ruiz and Luca.[2][1]
Pell factoriangular numbers
[edit]A Pell factoriangular number is a number that is both a Pell number and a factoriangular number.[3] Luca and Gómez-Ruiz proved that there are exactly three such numbers: , , and .[3]
Catalan factoriangular numbers
[edit]A Catalan factoriangular number is a number that is both a Catalan number and a factoriangular number.
Generalizations
[edit]The concept of factoriangular numbers can be generalized to -factoriangular numbers, defined as where and are positive integers. The original factoriangular numbers correspond to the case where . This generalization gives rise to factoriangular triangles, which are Pascal-like triangular arrays of numbers. Two such triangles can be formed:
- A triangle with entries where , yielding the sequence: 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, 25, 27, 30, 34, ...
- A triangle with entries where , yielding the sequence: 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 11, 12, 16, 34, ...
In both cases, the diagonal entries (where ) correspond to the original factoriangular numbers.
See also
[edit]- Doubly triangular number
- Factorial prime
- Fibonacci number
- Lazy caterer's sequence
- Square triangular number
References
[edit]- ^ a b Rayaguru, Sai Gopal; Odjoumani, Japhet; Panda, Gopal Krishna (2020-07-26). "Factoriangular numbers in balancing and Lucas-balancing sequence". Boletín de la Sociedad Matemática Mexicana. 26 (3): 865–878. doi:10.1007/s40590-020-00303-1.
- ^ Gomez Ruiz, C.A.; Luca, F. (2017). "Fibonacci factoriangular numbers". Indagationes Mathematicae. 28 (4): 796–804. doi:10.1016/j.indag.2017.05.002. hdl:21.11116/0000-0004-086E-9.
- ^ a b Luca, Florian; Odjoumani, Japhet; Togbé, Alain (2019). "Pell Factoriangular Numbers". Publications de l'Institut Mathématique. Nouvelle série. 105 (119): 93–100. doi:10.2298/PIM1919093L.
External links
[edit]- Sequence A101292 in the OEIS
- Sequence A275928 (number of odd divisors of factoriangular numbers) in the OEIS
- Sequence A275929 (sum of first and last terms of runsums of length n of nth factoriangular number) in the OEIS