A Horadam sequence is a generalization of the Fibonacci numbers defined by the four constants (\(p,q,r,s\)) and the definitions \(H_0=p\) and \(H_1=q\) together with the linear recurrence equation for \(n>1\):$$H_n=sH_{n-1}+rH_{n-2}$$Specific values of \(r\) and \(s\) lead to well known sequences:
- Fibonacci Numbers: \(F_n=F_{n-1}+F_{n-2}\\ \text{ where }n \geq 2, F_0=0, F_1=1\)
- Lucus Number: \(L_n=L_{n-1}+L_{n-2} \\ \text{ where } n \geq 2, L_0=2, L_1=1\)
- Pell Numbers: \(P_n=2P_{n-1}+P_{n-2} \\ \text{ where } n \geq 2, P_0=0, P_1=1\)
- Pell-Lucus Numbers: \(Q_n=2Q_{n-1}+Q_{n-2} \\ \text{ where } n \geq 2, Q_0=Q_1=1\)
- Jacobsthal Numbers: \(J_n=J_{n-1}+2J_{n-2} \\ \text{ where } n \geq 2, J_0=0, J_1=1 \)
- Jacobsthal-Lucas Numbers: \( j_n=j_{n-1}+2j_{n-2} \\ \text{ where } n \geq 2, j_0=j_1=2\)
A085449: Horadam sequence (0,1,4,2)
The numbers indicate that the sequence is generated as follows for \(n>1\):$$H_n=2H_{n-1}+4H_{n-2}$$with \(H_0=0\), \(H_1=1\), \(r=4\) and \(s=2\)
The sequence begins: 0, 1, 2, 8, 24, 80, 256, 832, 2688, 8704, 28160
The generating function is:$$ \frac{x}{1-2x-4x^2}$$The progressive ratios between successive terms approach the following number:$$ \frac{H_n}{H_{n-1}} \rightarrow 2\phi = \sqrt{5}+ 1 \text{ as }n \text{ gets larger}$$In the general case we have:$$ \frac{H_n}{H_{n-1}} \rightarrow \frac{r}{s} \phi = \frac{r}{s} (\sqrt{5}+ 1) \text{ as }n \text{ gets larger}$$Oddly, the name Horadam does not appear in the MacTutor biographies of mathematicians but Gemini provided the following summary of his life and work:Alwyn Francis ("Horrie") Horadam (1923–2016)
Alwyn Francis ("Horrie") Horadam was a prominent Australian mathematician best known for his extensive work in number theory and for generalizing second-order linear recurrences.
Here is a comprehensive overview of his life, career, and the mathematical sequences that bear his name.
Early Life and Education
Horadam was born on March 22, 1923, to a family of dairy farmers in the rural settlement of Scotts Flat in the Hunter Valley of New South Wales, Australia. His dedication to education was evident early on; during the Great Depression, he traveled 110 kilometers round-trip by train every day just to attend high school in Maitland, all while managing farm duties before and after his commute.
He went on to graduate with First Class Honours in Mathematics from the University of Sydney in 1944. He later earned a BEd from the University of Melbourne and a PhD from the University of Sydney, focusing his early doctoral research on Clifford geometry in complex projective spaces.
Academic Career at UNE
Horadam spent nearly his entire 40-year academic career at the University of New England (UNE) in Armidale, New South Wales. Starting as a lecturer in 1947, he eventually progressed to Professor of Mathematics and served as the Dean of the Faculty of Science.
Beyond his research, he was widely regarded as a deeply committed and generous educator. He served on the New South Wales Junior School Mathematics Committee for 25 continuous years, co-authored several high school mathematics textbooks, and maintained an open-door policy for his university students throughout his tenure.
The Horadam Sequence
While Horadam's early interests included geometry and algebra, his most lasting mathematical legacy lies in number theory—specifically, his generalization of integer sequences. Introduced in a series of papers in the 1960s, the Horadam sequence, commonly denoted as Wn(a, b; p, q), provides a unified framework for second-order linear recurrences.
The sequence is defined by two initial conditions:
W0 = a
W1 = b
And the recurrence relation for n ≥ 2:
Wn = pWn-1 - qWn-2
(Note: Depending on the specific convention used in various literature, the recurrence is sometimes written as Wn = pWn-1 + qWn-2.)
By altering the four parameters (a, b, p, q), the Horadam sequence acts as a parent to many famous recursive sequences:
- Fibonacci Numbers: Generated by setting a=0, b=1, p=1, and q=-1.
- Lucas Numbers: Generated by setting a=2, b=1, p=1, and q=-1.
- Pell Numbers: Generated by setting a=0, b=1, p=2, and q=-1.
This generalization allowed mathematicians to prove broad identities and Binet-style formulas that apply universally to all these sequences at once, rather than analyzing them in isolation.
Legacy in Sequence Analysis
Horadam's generalizations paved the way for modern, systematic analysis of recurrence relations. He was a foundation and sustaining member of the Fibonacci Association and served extensively on the editorial board of the Fibonacci Quarterly. Over his lifetime, he published widely on combinatorial structures, generating functions, and sequence periodicities.
He continued his research well into his retirement, publishing his final papers in 2006. Horadam passed away in Armidale in 2016 at the age of 93, leaving behind a profound legacy in both Australian mathematical education and global number theory.
Interestingly his wife was a fellow mathematician and clearly an impressive woman:
Eleanor Mollie Horadam (née Spedding) (1921–2002)
Eleanor Mollie Horadam was a highly accomplished mathematician in her own right, with a fascinating career and a lasting legacy in Australian academia. She was the wife of Alwyn Francis Horadam.
Early Life and World War II
Born on June 29, 1921, in Yorkshire, England, to a suffragette mother and a pharmacist father, Mollie demonstrated early academic brilliance. She studied the Mathematical Tripos at Girton College, Cambridge, earning her BA in 1942. However, because Cambridge did not allow women to receive degrees at public graduation ceremonies at the time, she was not publicly conferred her degree until she returned on a sabbatical in 1956.
During World War II, she worked in the Stress Group at Rolls-Royce, performing stress-strain analyses on jet engines. While working by day, she took night classes in engineering at the University of London, ultimately earning a First Class Honours degree. During this time, she even outpaced early computing; when told it would take weeks to run a stress problem on the newly constructed Mark 1 computer in Manchester, she manually proved the exact mathematical solution much faster.
Move to Australia and Academic Career
Dissatisfied with post-war England's lack of opportunities and preference for promoting less-qualified men, Mollie emigrated alone to Australia in 1949 to take up a lectureship in mathematics and physics at the New England University College (which later became the University of New England, or UNE). It was here that she met fellow mathematics lecturer Alwyn Horadam, whom she married in 1950.
Mollie became a trailblazer for women in Australian academia. She successfully lobbied UNE to update its maternity policies, which allowed her to retain her lecturing position while raising their three daughters—a highly unusual achievement for the era. One of their daughters, Kathy Horadam, also went on to become a prominent Australian mathematician and Emeritus Professor at RMIT.
Mathematical Contributions
Inspired by lectures from J.E. Littlewood during her 1956 sabbatical at Cambridge, Mollie shifted her focus to number theory at the age of 35. Over the next decade, she published more than 30 research papers, primarily focusing on the number theory of generalised integers and generalised prime numbers. This extensive body of research earned her a PhD by Prior Publication from UNE in 1965, leading to her promotion to Senior Lecturer. She also authored the textbook Principles of Mathematics for Economists.
In 1970, she broke another barrier by becoming the first female Sub-Dean of a faculty (Science) at UNE. Following her academic retirement in 1982, she established a successful commercial business dealing in antique silver. She was admitted as a Fellow of the University of New England in 1995. Mollie passed away in Armidale in 2002 at the age of 80, remembered as a pioneering intellect, a community leader, and a resilient force in a predominantly male profession.
Their eldest daughter followed in her parents' footsteps:
Alwyn and Mollie Horadam had three daughters: Kathryn (Kathy), Kerry, and Alanna. They also had a total of five granddaughters and one grandson.
The most publicly known of their children is their daughter Kathryn Jennifer Horadam (born in 1951 in Armidale), who followed in her parents' footsteps to become a highly accomplished and internationally recognized mathematician.
Kathryn Horadam's Career and Contributions
- Education: She studied mathematics at the Australian National University, earning her bachelor's degree in 1972 and completing her PhD in 1977 with a dissertation titled The Homology of Groupnets.
- Academic Career: She built a long and distinguished career at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT), where she worked for over 30 years. She became a full professor of mathematics there in 1995 and currently holds the title of Emeritus Professor.
- Research Focus: She is best known for her specialized research on Hadamard matrices and their applications in information security (keeping digital data safe). Outside of academia, she applied this expertise by working for three years with Australia's Defence Science and Technology Group.
- Publications: She authored the comprehensive text Hadamard Matrices and Their Applications, published by Princeton University Press in 2007.
- Recognition: Her impact on mathematics has been widely celebrated. She became a fellow of the Institute of Combinatorics and its Applications in 1991 and a fellow of the Australian Mathematical Society in 2001. In 2011, RMIT hosted a special international workshop on Hadamard matrices specifically in honor of her 60th birthday, with the resulting papers published in a special 2013 issue of the Australasian Journal of Combinatorics.
While Kathy pursued a high-profile academic career in mathematics like her parents, public details regarding the specific careers and lives of Kerry and Alanna are not prominently featured in public or academic records.


