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A Zeisel number, named after Helmut Zeisel, is a square-free integer k with at least three prime factors which fall into the pattern
where a and b are some integer constants and x is the index number of each prime factor in the factorization, sorted from lowest to highest. For the purpose of determining Zeisel numbers, . The first few Zeisel numbers are
To give an example, 1729 is a Zeisel number with the constants a = 1 and b = 6, its factors being 7, 13 and 19, falling into the pattern
1729 is an example for Carmichael numbers of the kind , which satisfies the pattern with a= 1 and b = 6n, so that every Carmichael number of the form (6n+1)(12n+1)(18n+1) is a Zeisel number.
Other Carmichael numbers of that kind are: 294409, 56052361, 118901521, 172947529, 216821881, 228842209, 1299963601, 2301745249, 9624742921, … (sequence A033502 in the OEIS).
The name Zeisel numbers was probably introduced by Kevin Brown, who was looking for numbers that when plugged into the equation
yield prime numbers. In a posting to the newsgroup sci.math on 1994-02-24, Helmut Zeisel pointed out that 1885 is one such number. Later it was discovered (by Kevin Brown?) that 1885 additionally has prime factors with the relationship described above, so a name like Brown-Zeisel Numbers might be more appropriate.
Hardy–Ramanujan's number 1729 is also a Zeisel number.