174 (number) explained

Number:174
Divisor:1, 2, 3, 6, 29, 58, 87, 174

174 (one hundred [and] seventy-four) is the natural number following 173 and preceding 175.

In mathematics

There are 174 7-crossing semi-meanders, ways of arranging a semi-infinite curve in the plane so that it crosses a straight line seven times. There are 174 invertible

3 x 3

(0,1)-matrices.[1] There are also 174 combinatorially distinct ways of subdividing a topological cuboid into a mesh of tetrahedra, without adding extra vertices, although not all can be represented geometrically by flat-sided polyhedra.[2]

y2=x3-174

has rank three, and 174 is the smallest positive integer for which

y2=x3-k

has this rank. The corresponding number for curves

y2=x3+k

is 113.[3]

In other fields

In English draughts or checkers, a common variation is the "three-move restriction", in which the first three moves by both players are chosen at random. There are 174 different choices for these moves, although some systems for choosing these moves further restrict them to a subset that is believed to lead to an even position.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Živković . Miodrag . math/0511636 . 10.1016/j.laa.2005.10.010 . 1 . Linear Algebra and Its Applications . 2209249 . 310–346 . Classification of small (0,1) matrices . 414 . 2006.
  2. Pellerin . Jeanne . Verhetsel . Kilian . Remacle . Jean-François . 1801.01288 . December 2018 . 10.1145/3272127.3275037 . 6 . ACM Transactions on Graphics . 1–9 . There are 174 subdivisions of the hexahedron into tetrahedra . 37. 54136193 .
  3. Gebel . J. . Pethö . A. . Zimmer . H. G. . 10.1023/A:1000281602647 . 3 . Compositio Mathematica . 1602064 . 335–367 . On Mordell's equation . 110 . 1998. 122592480 . free . See table, p. 352.
  4. Schaeffer . Jonathan . March 2005 . 10.3233/icg-2005-28107 . 1 . ICGA Journal . 32–36 . Solving checkers: first result . 28.