49 (number) explained

Number:49
Divisor:1,1-;

7, 49

49 (forty-nine) is the natural number following 48 and preceding 50.

In mathematics

Forty-nine is the square of the prime number seven and hence the fourth non-unitary square prime of the form p2

DcIt appears in the Padovan sequence, preceded by the terms 21, 28, 37 (it is the sum of the first two of these).[1]

Along with the number that immediately derives from it, 77, the only number under 100 not having its home prime known .

The smallest triple of three squares in arithmetic succession is (1,25,49), and the second smallest is (49,169,289).

49 is the smallest discriminant of a totally real cubic field.[2]

49 and 94 are the only numbers below 100 whose all permutations are composites but they are not multiples of 3, repdigits or numbers which only have digits 0, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 8, even excluding the trivial one digit terms.

49 = 7^2 and 94 = 2 * 47

The number of prime knots with 9 crossings is 49.

Decimal representation

The sum of the digits of the square of 49 (2401) is the square root of 49.

49 is the first square where the digits are squares. In this case, 4 and 9 are squares.

Reciprocal

See also: Repeating decimal.

The fraction is a repeating decimal with a period of 42:

= (42 digits repeat)

There are 42 positive integers less than 49 and coprime to 49. (42 is the period.) Multiplying 020408163265306122448979591836734693877551 by each of these integers results in a cyclic permutation of the original number:

The repeating number can be obtained from 02 and repetition of doubles placed at two places to the right:

02 04 08 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024 2048 + ... ---------------------- 020408163265306122448979591836734693877551...0204081632...

because satisfies:

x=

1
50

+

2x
100

=

1
50

(1+x).

In chemistry

In astronomy

In religion

In sports

In music

In other fields

See also: List of highways numbered 49. Forty-nine is:

See also

References

  1. Web site: Sloane's A000931 : Padovan sequence. The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. 2016-05-30.
  2. 2024-03-20 .
  3. Hammel. E.F.. 2000. The taming of "49" — Big Science in little time. Recollections of Edward F. Hammel, pp. 2-9. In: Cooper N.G. Ed. (2000). Challenges in Plutonium Science . Los Alamos Science. 26. 1. 2–9.
  4. Hecker. S.S.. 2000. Plutonium: an historical overview. In: Challenges in Plutonium Science. Los Alamos Science. 26. 1. 1–2.
  5. Web site: California State University, Fresno. Days of Forty-Nine, The. 2022-10-09.
  6. Web site: English Folk Dance and Song Society. RN2803: Days of '49. 2022-10-09.
  7. Web site: Forty-nine dance. Encyclopedia Britannica. May 25, 2018.
  8. Sharp, Damian (2001). Simple Numerology: A Simple Wisdom book (A Simple Wisdom Book series). Red Wheel. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-57324-560-9.