Belphegor's prime explained

Belphegor's prime is the palindromic prime number (1030 + 666 × 1014 + 1), a number which reads the same both backwards and forwards and is only divisible by itself and one. It was discovered by Harvey Dubner. The name Belphegor refers to one of the Seven Princes of Hell, who was charged with helping people make ingenious inventions and discoveries.[1] "Belphegor's prime" is a name coined by author Clifford A. Pickover.[2] The number itself contains superstitious elements that have given it its name: the number 666 at the heart of Belphegor's Prime is widely associated as being the Number of the Beast, used in symbolism to represent one of the creatures in the Apocalypse or, more commonly, the Devil. This number is surrounded on either side by thirteen zeroes and is 31 digits in length (thirteen reversed), with thirteen itself long regarded superstitiously as an unlucky number in Western culture.

In the short scale, this number would be named "one nonillion, sixty-six quadrillion, six hundred trillion one". In the long scale, this number's name would be "one quintillion, sixty-six billiard, six hundred billion one".

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Homer Simpson's scary maths problems. Simon. Singh. 31 October 2013. 31 October 2013. BBC News.
  2. Web site: Belphegor's Prime: 1000000000000066600000000000001. Clifford. Pickover. Clifford A. Pickover. 17 September 2016. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160411083428/http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/pickover/pc/1000000000000066600000000000001.html. 11 April 2016 .