OFFSET
1,1
COMMENTS
Note that 41 is the largest of Euler's Lucky numbers (A014556). - Lekraj Beedassy, Apr 22 2004
a(n) = A117530(13, n) for n <= 13: a(1) = A117530(13, 1) = A014556(6) = 41, A117531(13) = 13. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 26 2006
The link to E. Wegrzynowski contains the following incorrect statement: "It is possible to find a polynomial of the form n^2 + n + B that gives prime numbers for n = 0, ..., A, A being any number." It is known that the maximum is A = 39 for B = 41. - Luis Rodriguez (luiroto(AT)yahoo.com), Jun 22 2008
Contrary to the last comment, Mollin's Theorem 2.1 shows that any A is possible if the Prime k-tuples Conjecture is assumed. - T. D. Noe, Aug 31 2009
a(n) can be generated by a recurrence based on the gcd in the type of Eric Rowland and Aldrich Stevens. See the recurrence in PARI under PROG. - Mike Winkler, Oct 02 2013
These primes are not prime in O_(Q(sqrt(-163)). Given p = n^2 + n + 41, we have ((2n + 1)/2 - sqrt(-163)/2)((2n + 1)/2 + sqrt(-163)/2) = p, e.g., 1601 = 39^2 + 39 + 41 = (79/2 - sqrt(-163)/2)(79/2 + sqrt(-163)/2). - Alonso del Arte, Nov 03 2017
From Peter Bala, Apr 15 2018: (Start)
The polynomial P(n) := n^2 + n + 41 takes distinct prime values for the 40 consecutive integers n = 0 to 39. It follows that the polynomial P(n-40) takes prime values for the 80 consecutive integers n = 0 to 79, consisting of the 40 primes above each taken twice. We note two consequences of this fact.
1) The polynomial P(2*n-40) = 4*n^2 - 158*n + 1601 also takes prime values for the 40 consecutive integers n = 0 to 39.
2) The polynomial P(3*n-40) = 9*n^2 - 237*n + 1601 takes prime values for the 27 consecutive integers n = 0 to 26 ( = floor(79/3)). In addition, calculation shows that P(3*n-40) also takes prime values for n from -13 to -1. Equivalently put, the polynomial P(3*n-79) = 9*n^2 - 471*n + 6203 takes prime values for the 40 consecutive integers n = 0 to 39. This result is due to Higgins. Cf. A007635 and A048059. (End)
REFERENCES
R. K. Guy, Unsolved Problems Number Theory, Section A1.
O. Higgins, Another long string of primes, J. Rec. Math., 14 (1981/2) 185.
Paulo Ribenboim, The Book of Prime Number Records. Springer-Verlag, NY, 2nd ed., 1989, p. 137.
N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
LINKS
Zak Seidov, Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..10000.
Phil Carmody, Drag Racing Prime Numbers! - Vladimir Joseph Stephan Orlovsky, Jul 24 2011
Richard K. Guy, The strong law of small numbers. Amer. Math. Monthly 95 (1988), no. 8, 697-712. [Annotated scanned copy]
R. A. Mollin, Prime-producing quadratics, Amer. Math. Monthly 104 (1997), 529-544.
Jitender Singh, Prime numbers and factorization of polynomials, arXiv:2411.18366 [math.NT], 2024.
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Euler Prime
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Prime-Generating Polynomial
EXAMPLE
a(39) = 1601 = 39^2 + 39 + 41 is in the sequence because it is prime.
1681 = 40^2 + 40 + 41 is not in the sequence because 1681 = 41*41.
MAPLE
for y from 0 to 10 do
U := y^2+y+41;
if isprime(U) = true then print(U) end if ;
end do:
# Matt C. Anderson, Jan 04 2013
MATHEMATICA
Select[Table[n^2 + n + 41, {n, 0, 59}], PrimeQ] (* Alonso del Arte, Dec 08 2011 *)
PROG
(PARI) for(n=1, 1e3, if(isprime(k=n^2+n+41), print1(k", "))) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Jul 25 2011
(Haskell)
a005846 n = a005846_list !! (n-1)
a005846_list = filter ((== 1) . a010051) a202018_list
-- Reinhard Zumkeller, Dec 09 2011
(PARI) {k=2; n=1; for(x=1, 100000, f=x^2+x+41; g=x^2+3*x+43; a=gcd(f, g-k); if(a>1, k=k+2); if(a==x+2-k/2, print(n" "a); n++))} \\ Mike Winkler, Oct 02 2013
(GAP) Filtered(List([0..100], n->n^2+n+41), IsPrime); # Muniru A Asiru, Apr 22 2018
(Magma) [a: n in [0..55] | IsPrime(a) where a is n^2+n+ 41]; // Vincenzo Librandi, Apr 24 2018
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn,easy,changed
AUTHOR
EXTENSIONS
More terms from Henry Bottomley, Jun 26 2000
STATUS
editing