Leonardo number
The Leonardo numbers are a sequence of numbers given by the recurrence:
Edsger W. Dijkstra used them as an integral part of his smoothsort algorithm, and also analyzed them in some detail.
A Leonardo prime is a Leonardo number that is also prime.
Values
The first few Leonardo numbers are
- 1, 1, 3, 5, 9, 15, 25, 41, 67, 109, 177, 287, 465, 753, 1219, 1973, 3193, 5167, 8361, ... (sequence A001595 in the OEIS)
The first few Leonardo primes are
- 3, 5, 41, 67, 109, 1973, 5167, 2692537, 11405773, 126491971, 331160281, 535828591, 279167724889, 145446920496281, 28944668049352441, 5760134388741632239, 63880869269980199809, 167242286979696845953, 597222253637954133837103, ... (sequence A145912 in the OEIS)
Modulo cycles
The Leonardo numbers form a cycle in any modulo n≥2. An easy way to see it is:
- If a pair of numbers modulo n appears twice in the sequence, then there's a cycle.
- If we assume the main statement is false, using the previous statement, then it would imply there's infinite distinct pairs of numbers between 0 and n-1, which is false since there are n2 such pairs.
The cycles for n≤8 are:
The cycle always end on the pair (1,n-1), as it's the only pair which can precede the pair (1,1).
Expressions
- The following equation applies:
Relation to Fibonacci numbers
The Leonardo numbers are related to the Fibonacci numbers by the relation .
From this relation it is straightforward to derive a closed-form expression for the Leonardo numbers, analogous to Binet's formula for the Fibonacci numbers:
where the golden ratio and are the roots of the quadratic polynomial .
Leonardo polynomials
The Leonardo polynomials is defined by
- with
Equivalently, in homogeneous form, the Leonardo polynomials can be writtenas
where and
Examples of Leonardo polynomials
Substituting in the above polynomials gives the Leonardo numbers and setting gives the k-Loenardo numbers .
References
Cited
1. P. Catarino, A. Borges (2019): On Leonardo numbers. Acta Mathematica Universitatis Comenianae, 89(1), 75-86. Retrieved from http://www.iam.fmph.uniba.sk/amuc/ojs/index.php/amuc/article/view/1005/799
2. K. Prasad, R. Mohanty, M. Kumari, H. Mahato (2024): Some new families of generalized k-Leonardo and Gaussian Leonardo Numbers, Communications in Combinatorics and Optimization, 9 (3), 539-553. https://comb-opt.azaruniv.ac.ir/article_14544_6844cc9ba641d31cafe5358297bc0096.pdf
3. M. Kumari, K. Prasad, H. Mahato, P. Catarino (2024): On the generalized Leonardo quaternions and associated spinors, Kragujevac Journal of Mathematics 50 (3), 425-438. https://imi.pmf.kg.ac.rs/kjm/pub/kjom503/kjm_50_3-6.pdf
4. K. Prasad, H. Mahato, M. Kumari, R. Mohanty: On the generalized Leonardo Pisano octonions, National Academy Science Letters 47, 579–585. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40009-023-01291-2
5. Y. Soykan (2023): Special cases of generalized Leonardo numbers: Modified p-Leonardo, p-Leonardo-Lucas and p-Leonardo Numbers, Earthline Journal of Mathematical Sciences. https://www.preprints.org/frontend/manuscript/a700d41e884b69f92bc8eb6cf7ff1979/download_pub
6. Y. Soykan (2021): Generalized Leonardo numbers, Journal of Progressive Research in Mathematics. https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/483697189.pdf
7. E. Tan, HH Leung (2023): ON LEONARDO p-NUMBERS, Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory. https://math.colgate.edu/~integers/x7/x7.pdf
External links
- OEIS sequence A001595