10 Explained
10 (ten) is the even natural number following 9 and preceding 11. Ten is the base of the decimal numeral system, the most common system of denoting numbers in both spoken and written language.
Anthropology
Usage and terms
- A collection of ten items (most often ten years) is called a decade.
- The ordinal adjective is decimal; the distributive adjective is denary.
- Increasing a quantity by one order of magnitude is most widely understood to mean multiplying the quantity by ten.
- To reduce something by one tenth is to decimate. (In ancient Rome, the killing of one in ten soldiers in a cohort was the punishment for cowardice or mutiny; or, one-tenth of the able-bodied men in a village as a form of retribution, thus causing a labor shortage and threat of starvation in agrarian societies.)
Mathematics
Ten is the fifth composite number, and the smallest noncototient, which is a number that cannot be expressed as the difference between any integer and the total number of coprimes below it.[1] Ten is the eighth Perrin number, preceded by 5, 5, and 7.[2]
As important sums,
, the sum of the
squares of the first two
odd numbers[3]
, the sum of the first four positive
integers, equivalently the fourth
triangle number[4]
, the smallest number that can be written as the sum of two prime numbers in two different ways
[5] [6]
, the sum of the first three
prime numbers, and the smallest semiprime that is the sum of all the distinct prime numbers from its lower factor through its higher factor
[7] The factorial of ten is equal to the product of the factorials of the first four odd numbers as well:
,
[8] and 10 is the only number whose sum and difference of its prime divisors yield prime numbers
and
.
10 is also the first number whose fourth power (10,000) can be written as a sum of two squares in two different ways,
and
to be in
deficit, as with all subsequent discrete semiprimes.
[9] It is the second
composite in the
aliquot sequence for ten (10, 8,
7,
1,
0) that is rooted in the prime
7-
aliquot tree.
[10] According to conjecture, ten is the average sum of the proper divisors of the natural numbers
if the size of the numbers approaches infinity,
[11] and it is the smallest number whose status as a possible
friendly number is unknown.
[12] The smallest integer with exactly ten divisors is 48, while the least integer with exactly eleven divisors is 1024, which sets a new record.[13]
Figurate numbers that represent regular ten-sided polygons are called decagonal and centered decagonal numbers.[14] On the other hand, 10 is the first non-trivial centered triangular number[15] and tetrahedral number.[16] 10 is also the first member in the coordination sequence for body-centered tetragonal lattices.[17] [18]
While 55 is the tenth triangular number, it is also the tenth Fibonacci number, and the largest such number to also be a triangular number.[19] 55 is also the fourth doubly triangular number.[20]
10 is the fourth telephone number, and the number of Young tableaux with four cells.[21] It is also the number of
-
queens problem solutions for
.
[22] There are precisely ten small Pisot numbers that do not exceed the golden ratio.[23]
Geometry
Decagon
See main article: Decagon.
As a constructible polygon with a compass and straight-edge, the regular decagon has an internal angle of
degrees and a
central angle of
degrees. All regular
-sided polygons with up to ten sides are able to
tile a plane-vertex alongside other
regular polygons alone; the first regular polygon unable to do so is the eleven-sided
hendecagon.
[24] While the regular decagon cannot tile alongside other regular figures, ten of the eleven regular and semiregular tilings of the plane are
Wythoffian (the
elongated triangular tiling is the only exception);
[25] however, the
plane can be
covered using overlapping decagons, and is equivalent to the Penrose P2 tiling when it is decomposed into kites and rhombi that are proportioned in
golden ratio.
[26] The regular decagon is also the
Petrie polygon of the regular
dodecahedron and
icosahedron, and it is the largest
face that an
Archimedean solid can contain, as with the
truncated dodecahedron and
icosidodecahedron.
There are ten regular star polychora in the fourth dimension, all of which have orthographic projections in the
Coxeter plane that contain various
decagrammic symmetries, which include compound forms of the regular decagram.
[27] Higher-dimensional spaces
is a multiply transitive
permutation group on ten points. It is an
almost simple group, of
order,
720=24 ⋅ 32 ⋅ 5=2 ⋅ 3 ⋅ 4 ⋅ 5 ⋅ 6=8 ⋅ 9 ⋅ 10
It functions as a point stabilizer of degree 11 inside the smallest
sporadic simple group
, a group with an irreducible
faithful complex representation in ten dimensions, and an order equal to
that is one more than the
one-thousandth prime number, 7919.
is an infinite-dimensional
Kac–Moody algebra which has the even Lorentzian
unimodular lattice II
9,1 of dimension 10 as its root lattice. It is the first
Lie algebra with a negative
Cartan matrix determinant, of −1.
There are precisely ten affine Coxeter groups that admit a formal description of reflections across
dimensions in
Euclidean space. These contain
infinite facets whose
quotient group of their
normal abelian subgroups is finite. They include the one-dimensional Coxeter group
['''∞'''], which represents the
apeirogonal tiling, as well as the five affine Coxeter groups
,
,
,
, and
that are associated with the five
exceptional Lie algebras. They also include the four general affine Coxeter groups
,
,
, and
that are associated with
simplex,
cubic and
demihypercubic honeycombs, or
tessellations. Regarding Coxeter groups in
hyperbolic space, there are infinitely many such groups; however, ten is the highest
rank for paracompact hyperbolic solutions, with a representation in nine dimensions. There also exist hyperbolic Lorentzian
cocompact groups where removing any
permutation of two nodes in its
Coxeter–Dynkin diagram leaves a finite or Euclidean graph. The tenth dimension is the highest dimensional representation for such solutions, which share a root symmetry in eleven dimensions. These are of particular interest in
M-theory of
string theory.
Science
The SI prefix for 10 is "deca-".
The meaning "10" is part of the following terms:
- decapoda, an order of crustaceans with ten feet.
- decane, a hydrocarbon with 10 carbon atoms.
Also, the number 10 plays a role in the following:
The metric system is based on the number 10, so converting units is done by adding or removing zeros (e.g. 1 centimetre = 10 millimetres, 1 decimetre = 10 centimetres, 1 meter = 100 centimetres, 1 dekametre = 10 meters, 1 kilometre = 1,000 meters).
Music
- The interval of a major tenth is an octave plus a major third.
- The interval of a minor tenth is an octave plus a minor third.
Religion
Abrahamic religions
The Ten Commandments in the Hebrew Bible are ethical commandments decreed by God (to Moses) for the people of Israel to follow.
Mysticism
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Sloane's A005278 : Noncototients. The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. 2016-06-01.
- 2022-12-08 .
- 2023-11-07 .
- 2023-12-02 .
- 2023-11-07 .
- 2023-11-07 .
- 2022-12-08 .
- Web site: 10 . PrimeCurios! . . 2023-01-14 .
- 2022-12-08 .
- Sloane . N. J. A. . N. J. A. Sloane . Aliquot sequences . Mathematics of Computation . OEIS Foundation . 1975 . 29 . 129 . 101–107 . 2022-12-08 .
- 2022-12-08 .
- 2022-12-08 .
- 2023-11-07 .
- Web site: Sloane's A001107 : 10-gonal (or decagonal) numbers. The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. 2016-06-01.
- Web site: Sloane's A005448 : Centered triangular numbers. The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. 2016-06-01.
- Web site: Sloane's A000292 : Tetrahedral numbers. The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. 2016-06-01.
- 2023-11-07 .
- O'Keeffe . Michael . Michael O'Keeffe (chemist) . Coordination sequences for lattices . . 210 . 12 . . Berlin . 1995 . 905–908 . 1995ZK....210..905O . 10.1524/zkri.1995.210.12.905 . 96758246 .
- 2022-12-08 .
- 2023-12-18 .
- 2023-02-17 .
- 2022-12-08 .
- Book: M.J. Bertin . A. Decomps-Guilloux . M. Grandet-Hugot . M. Pathiaux-Delefosse . J.P. Schreiber . Pisot and Salem Numbers . Birkhäuser . 1992 . 3-7643-2648-4 .
- Branko . Grünbaum . Branko Grünbaum . Geoffrey . Shepard . G.C. Shephard . Tilings by Regular Polygons . November 1977 . . 50 . 5 . Taylor & Francis, Ltd.. 230, 231 . 10.2307/2689529 . 2689529 . 123776612 . 0385.51006 .
- Book: Grünbaum, Branko . Branko Grünbaum . Shephard, G. C. . G.C. Shephard . registration . Tilings and Patterns . Section 2.1: Regular and uniform tilings . W. H. Freeman and Company . New York . 1987 . 64 . 10.2307/2323457 . 2323457 . 0-7167-1193-1 . 13092426 . 119730123 .
- Petra . Gummelt . Penrose tilings as coverings of congruent decagons . . 62 . 1 . 1996 . 1–17 . . Berlin . 10.1007/BF00239998 . 1400977 . 0893.52011 . 120127686 .
- Book: Coxeter, H. S. M . H. S. M. Coxeter . Regular Polytopes . Chapter 14: Star-polytopes . Methuen & Co. LTD . London . 1948 . 263 .