# Greetings from The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences! http://oeis.org/ Search: id:a154626 Showing 1-1 of 1 %I A154626 #50 Sep 08 2022 08:45:40 %S A154626 1,2,8,40,208,1088,5696,29824,156160,817664,4281344,22417408, %T A154626 117379072,614604800,3218112512,16850255872,88229085184,461973487616, %U A154626 2418924584960,12665653559296,66318223015936,347246723858432,1818207451086848,9520257811087360 %N A154626 a(n) = 2^n*A001519(n). %C A154626 Hankel transform of 1,1,3,11,45,... (see A026375). Binomial transform of A015448. %C A154626 From _Gary W. Adamson_, Jul 22 2016: (Start) %C A154626 A production matrix for the sequence is M = %C A154626 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, ... %C A154626 1, 0, 5, 0, 0, ... %C A154626 1, 0, 0, 5, 0, ... %C A154626 1, 0, 0, 0, 5, ... %C A154626 ... %C A154626 Take powers of M, extracting the upper left terms; getting %C A154626 the sequence starting (1, 1, 2, 8, 40, 208, ...). (End) %C A154626 The sequence is N=5 in an infinite set of INVERT transforms of powers of N prefaced with a "1". (1, 2, 8, 40, ...) is the INVERT transform of (1, 1, 5, 25, 125, ...). The first six of such sequences are shown in A006012 (N=3). - _Gary W. Adamson_, Jul 24 2016 %C A154626 From _Gary W. Adamson_, Jul 27 2016: (Start) %C A154626 The sequence is the first in an infinite set in which we perform the operation for matrix M (Cf. Jul 22 2016), but change the left border successively from (1, 1, 1, 1, ...) then to (1, 2, 2, 2, ...), then (1, 3, 3, 3, ...) ...; generally (1, N, N, N, ...). Extracting the upper left terms of each matrix operation, we obtain the infinite set beginning: %C A154626 N=1 (A154626): 1, 2, 8, 40, 208, 1088, ... %C A154626 N=2 (A084120): 1, 3, 15, 81, 441, 1403, ... %C A154626 N=3 (A180034): 1, 4, 22, 124, 700, 3952, ... %C A154626 N=4 (A001653): 1, 5, 29, 169, 985, 5741, ... %C A154626 N=5 (A000400): 1, 6, 36, 216, 1296, 7776, ... %C A154626 N=6 (A015451): 1, 7, 43, 265, 1633, 10063, ... %C A154626 N=7 (A180029): 1, 8, 50, 316, 1996, 12608, ... %C A154626 N=8 (A180028): 1, 9, 57, 369, 1285, 15417, ... %C A154626 N=9 (.......): 1, 10, 64, 424, 2800, 18496, ... %C A154626 N=10 (A123361): 1, 11, 71, 481, 3241, 21851, ... %C A154626 N=11 (.......): 1, 12, 78, 540, 3708, 25488, ... %C A154626 ... Each of the sequences begins (1, (N+1), (7*N + 1), %C A154626 (40*N + (N-1)^2), ... (End) %C A154626 The set of infinite sequences shown (Cf. comment of Jul 27 2016), can be generated from the matrices P = [(1,N; 1,5]^n, (N=1,2,3,...) by extracting the upper left terms. Example: N=6 sequence (A015451): (1, 7, 43, 265, ...) can be generated from the matrix P = [(1,6); (1,5)]^n. - _Gary W. Adamson_, Jul 28 2016 %H A154626 Karl V. Keller, Jr., Table of n, a(n) for n = 0..1000 %H A154626 Index entries for linear recurrences with constant coefficients, signature (6,-4). %F A154626 G.f.: (1 - 4*x) / (1 - 6*x + 4*x^2). %F A154626 a(n) = A084326(n+1) - 4*A084326(n). - _R. J. Mathar_, Jul 19 2012 %F A154626 From _Colin Barker_, Sep 22 2017: (Start) %F A154626 a(n) = (((3-sqrt(5))^n*(1+sqrt(5)) + (-1+sqrt(5))*(3+sqrt(5))^n)) / (2*sqrt(5)). %F A154626 a(n) = 6*a(n-1) - 4*a(n-2) for n>1. %F A154626 (End) %t A154626 LinearRecurrence[{6, -4}, {1, 2}, 30] (* _Vincenzo Librandi_, May 15 2015 *) %o A154626 (Magma) [n le 2 select (n) else 6*Self(n-1)-4*Self(n-2): n in [1..25]]; // _Vincenzo Librandi_, May 15 2015 %o A154626 (PARI) Vec((1-4*x) / (1-6*x+4*x^2) + O(x^30)) \\ _Colin Barker_, Sep 22 2017 %Y A154626 Cf. A006012, A084120, A180034, A001653, A000400, A015451, A180029, A180028, A123362. %K A154626 easy,nonn %O A154626 0,2 %A A154626 _Paul Barry_, Jan 13 2009 # Content is available under The OEIS End-User License Agreement: http://oeis.org/LICENSE