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A042965
Nonnegative integers not congruent to 2 mod 4.
77
0, 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 51, 52, 53, 55, 56, 57, 59, 60, 61, 63, 64, 65, 67, 68, 69, 71, 72, 73, 75, 76, 77, 79, 80, 81, 83, 84, 85, 87, 88, 89, 91, 92
OFFSET
1,3
COMMENTS
Consider primitive Pythagorean triangles (A^2 + B^2 = C^2, (A, B) = 1, A <= B); sequence (starting at 3) gives values of AUB, sorted and duplicates removed. Values of AUBUC give same sequence. - David W. Wilson
These are the nonnegative integers that can be written as a difference of two squares, i.e., n = x^2 - y^2 for integers x,y. - Sharon Sela (sharonsela(AT)hotmail.com), Jan 25 2002. Equivalently, nonnegative numbers represented by the quadratic form x^2-y^2 of discriminant 4. The primes in this sequence are all the odd primes. - N. J. A. Sloane, May 30 2014
Numbers n such that Kronecker(4,n) == mu(gcd(4,n)). - Jon Perry, Sep 17 2002
Count, sieving out numbers of the form 2*(2*n+1) (A016825, "nombres pair-impairs"). A generalized Chebyshev transform of the Jacobsthal numbers: apply the transform g(x) -> (1/(1+x^2)) g(x/(1+x^2)) to the g.f. of A001045(n+2). Partial sums of 1,2,1,1,2,1,.... - Paul Barry, Apr 26 2005
For n>1, equals union of A020883 and A020884. - Lekraj Beedassy, Sep 28 2004
The sequence 1,1,3,4,5,... is the image of A001045(n+1) under the mapping g(x) -> g(x/(1+x^2)). - Paul Barry, Jan 16 2005
With offset 0 starting (1, 3, 4,...) = INVERT transform of A009531 starting (1, 2, -1, -4, 1, 6,...) with offset 0.
Apparently these are the regular numbers modulo 4 [Haukkanan & Toth]. - R. J. Mathar, Oct 07 2011
Numbers of the form x*y in nonnegative integers x,y with x+y even. - Michael Somos, May 18 2013
Convolution of A106510 with A000027. - L. Edson Jeffery, Jan 24 2015
Numbers that are the sum of zero or more consecutive odd positive numbers. - Gionata Neri, Sep 01 2015
Numbers that are congruent to {0, 1, 3} mod 4. - Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 10 2016
Nonnegative integers of the form (2+(3*m-2)/4^j)/3, j,m >= 0. - L. Edson Jeffery, Jan 02 2017
This is { x^2 - y^2; x >= y >= 0 }; with the restriction x > y one gets the same set without zero; with the restriction x > 0 (i.e., differences of two nonzero squares) one gets the set without 1. An odd number 2n-1 = n^2 - (n-1)^2, a number 4n = (n+1)^2 - (n-1)^2. - M. F. Hasler, May 08 2018
REFERENCES
R. K. Guy, Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, Springer, 1st edition, 1981. See section D9.
J. V. Uspensky and M. A. Heaslet, Elementary Number Theory, McGraw-Hill, NY, 1939, p. 83.
LINKS
Ray Chandler, Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..10000 (first 1000 terms from T. D. Noe)
Pentti Haukkanen and László Tóth, An analogue of Ramanujan's sum with respect to regular integers (mod r), Ramanujan J., Vol. 27, No. 1 (2012), pp. 71-88.
N. J. A. Sloane et al., Binary Quadratic Forms and OEIS (Index to related sequences, programs, references).
FORMULA
Recurrence: a(n) = a(n-1) + a(n-3) - a(n-4) for n>4.
a(n) = n - 1 + (3n-3-sqrt(3)*(1-2*cos(2*Pi*(n-1)/3))*sin(2*Pi*(n-1)/3))/9. Partial sums of the period-3 sequence 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, ... (A101825). - Ralf Stephan, May 19 2013
G.f.: A(x) = x^2*(1+x)^2/((1-x)^2*(1+x+x^2)); a(n)=Sum{k=0..floor(n/2)}, binomial(n-k-1, k)*A001045(n-2*k), n>0. - Paul Barry, Jan 16 2005, R. J. Mathar, Dec 09 2009
a(n) = floor((4*n-3)/3). - Gary Detlefs, May 14 2011
A214546(a(n)) != 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Jul 20 2012
From Michael Somos, May 18 2013: (Start)
Euler transform of length 3 sequence [3, -2, 1].
a(2-n) = -a(n). (End)
From Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 10 2016: (Start)
a(n) = (12*n-12+3*cos(2*n*Pi/3)+sqrt(3)*sin(2*n*Pi/3))/9.
a(3k) = 4k-1, a(3k-1) = 4k-3, a(3k-2) = 4k-4. (End)
a(n) = round((4*n-4)/3). - Mats Granvik, Sep 24 2016
The g.f. A(x) satisfies (A(x)/x)^2 + A(x)/x = x*B(x)^2, where B(x) is the o.g.f. of A042968. - Peter Bala, Apr 12 2017
Sum_{n>=2} (-1)^n/a(n) = log(sqrt(2)+2)/sqrt(2) - (sqrt(2)-1)*log(2)/4. - Amiram Eldar, Dec 05 2021
From Peter Bala, Aug 03 2022: (Start)
a(n) = a(floor(n/2)) + a(1 + ceiling(n/2)) for n >= 2, with a(2) = 1 and a(3) = 3.
a(2*n) = a(n) + a(n+1); a(2*n+1) = a(n) + a(n+2). Cf. A047222 and A006165. (End)
E.g.f.: (9 + 12*exp(x)*(x - 1) + exp(-x/2)*(3*cos(sqrt(3)*x/2) + sqrt(3)*sin(sqrt(3)*x/2)))/9. - Stefano Spezia, Apr 05 2023
EXAMPLE
G.f. = x^2 + 3*x^3 + 4*x^4 + 5*x^5 + 7*x^6 + 8*x^7 + 9*x^8 + 11*x^9 + 12*x^10 + ...
MAPLE
a_list := proc(len) local rec; rec := proc(n) option remember;
ifelse(n <= 4, [0, 1, 3, 4][n], rec(n-1) + rec(n-3) - rec(n-4)) end:
seq(rec(n), n=1..len) end: a_list(76); # Peter Luschny, Aug 06 2022
MATHEMATICA
nn=100; Complement[Range[0, nn], Range[2, nn, 4]] (* Harvey P. Dale, May 21 2011 *)
f[n_]:=Floor[(4*n-3)/3]; Array[f, 70] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Jun 26 2012 *)
LinearRecurrence[{1, 0, 1, -1}, {0, 1, 3, 4}, 70] (* L. Edson Jeffery, Jan 21 2015 *)
Select[Range[0, 100], ! MemberQ[{2}, Mod[#, 4]] &] (* Vincenzo Librandi, Sep 03 2015 *)
PROG
(PARI) a(n)=(4*n-3)\3 \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Jul 25 2011
(Haskell)
a042965 = (`div` 3) . (subtract 3) . (* 4)
a042965_list = 0 : 1 : 3 : map (+ 4) a042965_list
-- Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 09 2012
(Magma) [n: n in [0..100] | not n mod 4 in 2]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Sep 03 2015
CROSSREFS
Essentially the complement of A016825.
See A267958 for these numbers multiplied by 4.
Sequence in context: A183147 A074227 A122906 * A348004 A260003 A005848
KEYWORD
nonn,nice,easy
EXTENSIONS
Edited by N. J. A. Sloane at the suggestion of Andrew S. Plewe, Peter Pein and Ralf Stephan, Jun 17 2007
Typos fixed in Gary Detlefs's formula and in PARI program by Reinhard Zumkeller, Nov 09 2012
STATUS
approved