Pronic number
Template:Short description A pronic number is a number that is the product of two consecutive integers, that is, a number of the form .[1] The study of these numbers dates back to Aristotle. They are also called oblong numbers, heteromecic numbers,[2] or rectangular numbers;[3] however, the term "rectangular number" has also been applied to the composite numbers.[4][5]
The first 60 pronic numbers are:
- 0, 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, 42, 56, 72, 90, 110, 132, 156, 182, 210, 240, 272, 306, 342, 380, 420, 462, 506, 552, 600, 650, 702, 756, 812, 870, 930, 992, 1056, 1122, 1190, 1260, 1332, 1406, 1482, 1560, 1640, 1722, 1806, 1892, 1980, 2070, 2162, 2256, 2352, 2450, 2550, 2652, 2756, 2862, 2970, 3080, 3192, 3306, 3422, 3540, 3660... Template:OEIS.
Letting denote the pronic number , we have . Therefore, in discussing pronic numbers, we may assume that without loss of generality, a convention that is adopted in the following sections.
As figurate numbers

The pronic numbers were studied as figurate numbers alongside the triangular numbers and square numbers in Aristotle's Metaphysics,[2] and their discovery has been attributed much earlier to the Pythagoreans.[3] As a kind of figurate number, the pronic numbers are sometimes called oblong[2] because they are analogous to polygonal numbers in this way:[1]
The Template:Mvarth pronic number is the sum of the first Template:Mvar even integers, and as such is twice the Template:Mvarth triangular number[1][2] and Template:Mvar more than the Template:Mvarth square number, as given by the alternative formula Template:Math for pronic numbers. Hence the Template:Mvarth pronic number and the Template:Mvarth square number (the sum of the [[Square_number#Properties|first Template:Mvar odd integers]]) form a superparticular ratio:
Due to this ratio, the Template:Mvarth pronic number is at a radius of Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar + 1 from a perfect square, and the Template:Mvarth perfect square is at a radius of Template:Mvar from a pronic number. The Template:Mvarth pronic number is also the difference between the odd square Template:Math and the Template:Mathst centered hexagonal number.
Since the number of off-diagonal entries in a square matrix is twice a triangular number, it is a pronic number.[6]
Sum of pronic numbers
The partial sum of the first Template:Mvar positive pronic numbers is twice the value of the Template:Mvarth tetrahedral number:
- .
The sum of the reciprocals of the positive pronic numbers (excluding 0) is a telescoping series that sums to 1:[7]
- .
The partial sum of the first Template:Mvar terms in this series is[7]
- .
The alternating sum of the reciprocals of the positive pronic numbers (excluding 0) is a convergent series:
- .
Additional properties
Pronic numbers are even, and 2 is the only prime pronic number. It is also the only pronic number in the Fibonacci sequence and the only pronic Lucas number.[8][9]
The arithmetic mean of two consecutive pronic numbers is a square number:
So there is a square between any two consecutive pronic numbers. It is unique, since
Another consequence of this chain of inequalities is the following property. If Template:Mvar is a pronic number, then the following holds:
The fact that consecutive integers are coprime and that a pronic number is the product of two consecutive integers leads to a number of properties. Each distinct prime factor of a pronic number is present in only one of the factors Template:Mvar or Template:Math. Thus a pronic number is squarefree if and only if Template:Mvar and Template:Math are also squarefree. The number of distinct prime factors of a pronic number is the sum of the number of distinct prime factors of Template:Mvar and Template:Math.
If 25 is appended to the decimal representation of any pronic number, the result is a square number, the square of a number ending on 5; for example, 625 = 252 and 1225 = 352. This is so because
- .
The difference between two consecutive unit fractions is the reciprocal of a pronic number:[10]
References
Template:Divisor classes Template:Classes of natural numbers