Interesting thing I've noted

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the observation of specific mathematical relationships involving powers of 2 and their connection to squares and Mersenne primes. Participants explore patterns and seek to identify further occurrences of these relationships.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes a pattern where certain powers of 2 relate to consecutive squares and proposes an equation involving these powers.
  • Another participant conducts a computer search for further occurrences of this pattern but finds none with exponents less than 1000, suggesting the possibility of looking for other patterns.
  • A third participant confirms the absence of additional numbers related to the initial observation and provides a link to an external resource.
  • There is mention of a previous post regarding sums and differences of powers, indicating that the discussion may have evolved or been interrupted.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the existence of further occurrences of the observed pattern, with some suggesting alternative avenues of exploration while others confirm the lack of additional examples.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the reliance on computational searches for verification and the potential for errors in those searches. There are also references to previous posts that may have contained relevant information but were not available for discussion.

karpmage
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2^2-1 = 2^2-1 = 1^2+2
2^3-1 = 3^2-2 = 2^2+3
2^5-1 = 6^2-5 = 5^2+6
2^13-1 = 91^2-90 = 90^2+91

I realize that x^2-(x-1)==(x-1)^2+(x)

2,3,5 and 13 are all the powers of mersenne primes, and are Fibonacci numbers as well.
It'd be interesting to see what's the next power of 2 that satisfies this equation.
 
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Hi there, you have observed some cases of powers of 2 being almost in the middle of consecutive squares, and you ask about the next occurrence. A quick computer search reveals no such cases with exponent less than 1000. So unless either I or my computer made a mistake, which may very well happen, you may want to look for other patterns instead.

What happened to your post about sums and differences of two powers? I had written a reply, including this http://oeis.org/A074981http://, and the relation 30=832-193, and some more, and then I couldn't post it.
 
Sorry, I posted this to another maths forum as well, and it turns out there are no other numbers. Here's the link I was sent:
http://oeis.org/A215797
 
Norwegian said:
Hi there, you have observed some cases of powers of 2 being almost in the middle of consecutive squares, and you ask about the next occurrence. A quick computer search reveals no such cases with exponent less than 1000. So unless either I or my computer made a mistake, which may very well happen, you may want to look for other patterns instead.

What happened to your post about sums and differences of two powers? I had written a reply, including this http://oeis.org/A074981http://, and the relation 30=832-193, and some more, and then I couldn't post it.

My last post violated forum rules, I am going to repost a revised version of it. Didn't see your reply before they deleted it, unfortunately.
 

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