table of differences between and for
There are only three known solutions to Brocard’s problem, and the near misses all seem to occur early on. Notice how, for example, 3! is just 3 shy of a square (compared to 1 shy of a square which is what Brocard’s problem asks for). Still, the differences between a factorial and the next higher perfect square don’t make for a consistently ascending order sequence. For a few values of , (such as 4, 7, 10, 24, 26, 42, 117, 135) this difference is smaller than the previous difference. In general, however, the difference between a factorial and the next perfect square widens as gets larger.
The following table gives the square root of to six decimal places, and then the difference between the factorial and the next higher square (obtained by taking the ceiling of the square root of and squaring that integer).
1 | 1.000000 | 0 |
2 | 1.414214 | 2 |
3 | 2.449489 | 3 |
4 | 4.898979 | 1 |
5 | 10.954451 | 1 |
6 | 26.832816 | 9 |
7 | 70.992957 | 1 |
8 | 200.798406 | 81 |
9 | 602.395219 | 729 |
10 | 1904.940944 | 225 |
11 | 6317.974359 | 324 |
12 | 21886.105181 | 39169 |
13 | 78911.474451 | 82944 |
14 | 295259.701280 | 176400 |
15 | 1143535.905864 | 215296 |
16 | 4574143.623456 | 3444736 |
17 | 18859677.306253 | 26167684 |
18 | 80014834.285449 | 114349225 |
19 | 348776576.634429 | 255004929 |
20 | 1559776268.628498 | 1158920361 |
21 | 7147792818.185865 | 11638526761 |
22 | 33526120082.371712 | 42128246889 |
23 | 160785623545.405884 | 191052974116 |
24 | 787685471322.938354 | 97216010329 |
25 | 3938427356614.691406 | 2430400258225 |
Title | table of differences between and for |
---|---|
Canonical name | TableOfDifferencesBetweenlceilsqrtnrceil2AndNFor0N26 |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 18:10:20 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 18:10:20 |
Owner | PrimeFan (13766) |
Last modified by | PrimeFan (13766) |
Numerical id | 5 |
Author | PrimeFan (13766) |
Entry type | Data Structure |
Classification | msc 11A25 |