NSW Number
An NSW number (named after Newman, Shanks, and Williams) is an integer that solves the Diophantine equation
|
(1)
|
In other words, the NSW numbers index the diagonals of squares of side length
having the property that the squares of the diagonal
equals one plus a square
number
.
Such numbers were called "rational diagonals" by the Greeks (Wells 1986,
p. 70). The name "NSW number" derives from the names of the authors
of the paper on the subject written by Newman et al. (1980/81).
The first few NSW numbers are therefore , 7, 41, 239, 1393, ... (OEIS A002315),
which correspond to square side lengths
, 5, 29, 169, 985, 5741, 33461, 195025, ... (OEIS A001653).
The values indexed by
and
therefore give 2, 50, 1682, 57122, ...
(OEIS A088920).
Taking twice the NSW numbers gives the sequence 2, 14, 82, 478, 2786, 16238, ... (OEIS A077444), which is exactly every other Pell-Lucas number.
The first few prime NSW numbers are , 41, 239, 9369319, 63018038201, 489133282872437279, ...
(OEIS A088165), corresponding to indices
, 2, 3, 9, 14, 23, 29, 81, 128, 210,
468, 473, 746, 950, 3344, 4043, 4839, 14376, 39521, 64563, 72984, 82899, 84338, 85206,
86121, 139160, ... (OEIS A113501).
The following table summarizes the largest known NSW primes, where the indices correspond via
to the indices
of prime half-Pell-Lucas numbers
that are odd.
| decimal digits | discoverer | date | |
| E. W. Weisstein | May 19, 2006 | ||
| E. W. Weisstein | Aug. 29, 2006 | ||
| E. W. Weisstein | Nov. 16, 2006 | ||
| E. W. Weisstein | Nov. 26, 2006 | ||
| E. W. Weisstein | Dec. 10, 2006 | ||
| E. W. Weisstein | Jan. 25, 2007 | ||
| R. Price | Dec. 7, 2018 |
Interestingly, the values
give every other convergent to Pythagoras's constant
.
Explicit formula for
and
are given by
|
(2)
| |||
|
(3)
|
for positive integers
(Ribenboim 1996, p. 367). A recurrence relation
for
is given by
|
(4)
|
with and
.
See also
Pell Number, Pythagoras's ConstantExplore with Wolfram|Alpha
References
Newman, M.; Shanks, D.; and Williams, H. C. "Simple Groups of Square Order and an Interesting Sequence of Primes." Acta Arith. 38, 129-140, 1980/81.Ribenboim, P. "The NSW Primes." §5.9 in The New Book of Prime Number Records. New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 367-369, 1996.Sloane, N. J. A. Sequences A001653/M3955, A002315/M4423, A077444, A088165, A088920, and A113501 in "The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences."Wells, D. The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers. Middlesex, England: Penguin Books, p. 70, 1986.Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha
NSW NumberCite this as:
Weisstein, Eric W. "NSW Number." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/NSWNumber.html