17 (number) explained

Number:17
Numeral:septendecimal
Factorization:prime
Prime:7th
Divisor:1, 17
Lang1:Hebrew numeral
Lang1 Symbol:י"ז
Lang2:Babylonian numeral

17 (seventeen) is the natural number following 16 and preceding 18. It is a prime number.

Seventeen is the sum of the first four prime numbers.

17 was described at MIT as "the least random number", according to the Jargon File.[1] This is supposedly because, in a study where respondents were asked to choose a random number from 1 to 20, 17 was the most common choice. This study has been repeated a number of times.[2]

Mathematics

Seventeen is the seventh prime number, which makes it the fourth super-prime,[3] as seven is itself prime.

Prime properties

Seventeen is the only prime number which is the sum of four consecutive primes (2, 3, 5, and 7), as any other four consecutive primes that are added always generate an even number divisible by two.

It forms a twin prime with 19,[4] a cousin prime with 13,[5] and a sexy prime with both 11 and 23.[6] Furthermore,

2n-1

, yielding 131071.[7]

xy+yx

and

xy-yx

; and as such, it is a Leyland prime (of the first and second kind):[9] [10]

23+32=17=34-43.

The number of integer partitions of 17 into prime parts is 17 (the only number

n

such that its number of such partitions is

n

).[11]

Fermat prime

Seventeen is the third Fermat prime, as it is of the form

2n
2

+1

with

n=2

.[12] On the other hand, the seventeenth Jacobsthal–Lucas number — that is part of a sequence which includes four Fermat primes (except for 3) — is the fifth and largest known Fermat prime: 65,537.[13] It is one more than the smallest number with exactly seventeen divisors, 65,536 = 216.[14]

Since seventeen is a Fermat prime, regular heptadecagons can be constructed with a compass and unmarked ruler. This was proven by Carl Friedrich Gauss and ultimately led him to choose mathematics over philology for his studies.[15] [16]

Quadratic integer matrix

A positive definite quadratic integer matrix represents all primes when it contains at least the set of seventeen numbers:

\{2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,67,73\}.

Only four prime numbers less than the largest member are not part of the set (53, 59, 61, and 71).

Geometric properties

Two-dimensions

17 is the least

k

for the Theodorus Spiral to complete one revolution.[28] This, in the sense of Plato, who questioned why Theodorus (his tutor) stopped at

\sqrt{17}

when illustrating adjacent right triangles whose bases are units and heights are successive square roots, starting with

1

. In part due to Theodorus’s work as outlined in Plato’s Theaetetus, it is believed that Theodorus had proved all the square roots of non-square integers from 3 to 17 are irrational by means of this spiral.

Enumeration of icosahedron stellations

In three-dimensional space, there are seventeen distinct fully supported stellations generated by an icosahedron.[29] The seventeenth prime number is 59, which is equal to the total number of stellations of the icosahedron by Miller's rules.[30] [31] Without counting the icosahedron as a zeroth stellation, this total becomes 58, a count equal to the sum of the first seven prime numbers (2 + 3 + 5 + 7 ... + 17).[32] Seventeen distinct fully supported stellations are also produced by truncated cube and truncated octahedron.[29]

Four-dimensional zonotopes

Seventeen is also the number of four-dimensional parallelotopes that are zonotopes. Another 34, or twice 17, are Minkowski sums of zonotopes with the 24-cell, itself the simplest parallelotope that is not a zonotope.[33]

Abstract algebra

Seventeen is the highest dimension for paracompact Vineberg polytopes with rank

n+2

mirror facets, with the lowest belonging to the third.[34]

17 is a supersingular prime, because it divides the order of the Monster group.[35] If the Tits group is included as a non-strict group of Lie type, then there are seventeen total classes of Lie groups that are simultaneously finite and simple (see classification of finite simple groups). In base ten, (17, 71) form the seventh permutation class of permutable primes.[36]

Other notable properties

n=1,2,3,...

, agree up until

n=17

.

Complex analysis

There are seventeen orthogonal curvilinear coordinate systems (to within a conformal symmetry) in which the three-variable Laplace equation can be solved using the separation of variables technique.

Sudoku puzzle

The minimum possible number of givens for a sudoku puzzle with a unique solution is 17.[38] [39]

In science

Physics

Seventeen is the number of elementary particles with unique names in the Standard Model of physics.[40]

Chemistry

Group 17 of the periodic table is called the halogens. The atomic number of chlorine is 17.

Biology

Some species of cicadas have a life cycle of 17 years (i.e. they are buried in the ground for 17 years between every mating season).

In religion

Other fields

Seventeen is:

Music

Where Pythagoreans saw 17 in between 16 from its Epogdoon of 18 in distaste,[41] the ratio 18:17 was a popular approximation for the equal tempered semitone (12-tone) during the Renaissance.

References

  1. Web site: random numbers. catb.org/.
  2. Web site: The Power of 17. Cosmic Variance. 2010-06-14. 2008-12-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20081204111153/http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2007/01/30/the-power-of-17/. dead.
  3. 2023-06-29 .
  4. 2022-11-25 .
  5. 2022-11-25 .
  6. 2022-11-25 .
  7. 2022-11-25 .
  8. 2022-11-25 .
  9. 2022-11-25 .
  10. 2022-11-25 .
  11. 2024-02-12 .
  12. Web site: Sloane's A019434 : Fermat primes. The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. 2016-06-01.
  13. 2023-06-29 .
  14. 2023-06-28 .
  15. John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers. New York: Copernicus (1996): 11. "Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) showed that two regular "heptadecagons" (17-sided polygons) could be constructed with ruler and compasses."
  16. [Theoni Pappas|Pappas, Theoni]
  17. 2022-11-25 .
  18. .
  19. Web site: Shield - a 3.7.42 tiling. Kevin Jardine's projects. Kevin Jardine. 2022-03-07.
  20. Web site: Dancer - a 3.8.24 tiling. Kevin Jardine's projects. Kevin Jardine. 2022-03-07.
  21. Web site: Art - a 3.9.18 tiling. Kevin Jardine's projects. Kevin Jardine. 2022-03-07.
  22. Web site: Fighters - a 3.10.15 tiling. Kevin Jardine's projects. Kevin Jardine. 2022-03-07.
  23. Web site: Compass - a 4.5.20 tiling. Kevin Jardine's projects. Kevin Jardine. 2022-03-07.
  24. Web site: Broken roses - three 5.5.10 tilings. Kevin Jardine's projects. Kevin Jardine. 2022-03-07.
  25. Web site: Pentagon-Decagon Packing. American Mathematical Society. AMS. 2022-03-07.
  26. 2022-11-25 .
  27. Book: Babbitt, Frank Cole. Plutarch's Moralia. Loeb. 1936. V.
  28. 2024-06-19 .
  29. Web site: Enumeration of Stellations . Webb . Robert . www.software3d.com . 2022-11-25 . https://archive.today/20221126015207/https://www.software3d.com/Enumerate.php . 2022-11-26 .
  30. Book: . P. Du Val . H. T. Flather . J. F. Petrie . The Fifty-Nine Icosahedra . Springer . New York . 1982 . 10.1007/978-1-4613-8216-4 . 978-1-4613-8216-4 .
  31. 2023-02-17 .
  32. 2023-02-17 .
  33. Senechal. Marjorie. Marjorie Senechal. Galiulin. R. V.. 2099/1195. 10. Structural Topology. en,fr. 768703. 5–22. An introduction to the theory of figures: the geometry of E. S. Fedorov. 1984.
  34. Tumarkin . P.V. . May 2004 . Hyperbolic Coxeter N-Polytopes with n+2 Facets . Mathematical Notes . 75 . 5/6 . 848–854 . 10.1023/B:MATN.0000030993.74338.dd . math/0301133 . 18 March 2022.
  35. 2022-11-25 .
  36. 2023-06-29 .
  37. . . Irregularities in the distributions of finite sequences . Journal of Number Theory. 2. 1970. 2 . 152–161. 0269605. 10.1016/0022-314X(70)90015-6. 1970JNT.....2..152B . free.
  38. McGuire. Gary. There is no 16-clue sudoku: solving the sudoku minimum number of clues problem. 1201.0749. cs.DS. 2012.
  39. McGuire . Gary . Tugemann . Bastian . Civario . Gilles . 8973439 . 2014 . There is no 16-clue sudoku: Solving the sudoku minimum number of clues problem via hitting set enumeration . Experimental Mathematics . 23 . 2 . 190–217 . 10.1080/10586458.2013.870056 .
  40. The Standard Model. Glenn Elert. The Physics Hypertextbook. 2021.
  41. Book: Isis and Osiris (Part 3 of 5). Plutarch, Moralia. Loeb Classical Library edition. 1936.

External links