Meertens number

In number theory and mathematical logic, a Meertens number in a given number base is a natural number that is its own Gödel number. It was named after Lambert Meertens by Richard S. Bird as a present during the celebration of his 25 years at the CWI, Amsterdam.[1]

Definition

Let be a natural number. We define the Meertens function for base to be the following:

where is the number of digits in the number in base , is the -prime number, and

is the value of each digit of the number. A natural number is a Meertens number if it is a fixed point for , which occurs if . This corresponds to a Gödel encoding.

For example, the number 3020 in base is a Meertens number, because

.

A natural number is a sociable Meertens number if it is a periodic point for , where for a positive integer , and forms a cycle of period . A Meertens number is a sociable Meertens number with , and a amicable Meertens number is a sociable Meertens number with .

The number of iterations needed for to reach a fixed point is the Meertens function's persistence of , and undefined if it never reaches a fixed point.

Meertens numbers and cycles of for specific

All numbers are in base .

Meertens numbers Cycles Comments
210, 110, 1010[2]
310111 → 20 → 11[2]
430202 → 10 → 2[2]
511, 3032000, 21302000[2]
613012 → 30 → 12[2]
7202[2]
8330[2]
97810000[2]
1081312000[2]
11[2]
12[2]
13[2]
1413310[2]
15[2]
16122 → 4 → 10 → 2[2]
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gollark: Of course.
gollark: Can *you* hear *me*?
gollark: No.
gollark: https://onezero.medium.com/anxiety-is-the-dizziness-of-freedom-b5ab45cae2a5

See also

References

  1. Richard S. Bird (1998). "Meertens number". Journal of Functional Programming. 8 (1): 83–88. doi:10.1017/S0956796897002931.
  2. (sequence A246532 in the OEIS)
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