We explore A000327, the OEIS entry counting the number of solutions with distinct positive integers a and b to a^23 + b^23 ≤ n (i.e., partitions into non-integral powers). We trace its pedigree—from N. Sloan’s original listing in the 1973 Handbook of Integer Sequences to the expanded coverage in the 1995 Encyclopedia—and highlight its surprising connections beyond pure math, including Agarwala and Alok’s 1951 link to statistical mechanics. We unpack Seth Troisi’s neat formula that expresses A000327(n) via a classic lattice-point count (points with x^2 + y^2 ≤ n), revealing a geometric bridge between non-integral-power partitions and circle geometry. Finally, we muse on how changing the exponent reshapes the sequence and where such non-integral-power partitions might appear in physics and beyond.
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