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A tetrahedral number, or triangular pyramidal number, is a figurate number that represents a pyramid with a triangular base and three sides, called a tetrahedron. The n th tetrahedral number, Te n , is the sum of the first n triangular numbers , that is,
Figurate numbers were a concern of the Pythagorean worldview. It was well understood that some numbers could have many figurations, e.g. 36 is a both a square and a triangle and also various rectangles. The modern study of figurate numbers goes back to Pierre de Fermat, specifically the Fermat polygonal number theorem.
In mathematics, a centered tetrahedral number is a centered figurate number that represents a tetrahedron. That is, it counts the dots in a three-dimensional dot pattern with a single dot surrounded by tetrahedral shells. [1] The th centered tetrahedral number, starting at = for a single dot, is: [2] [3]
A triangular-pyramid version of the cannonball problem, which is to yield a perfect square from the N th Tetrahedral number, would have N = 48. That means that the (24 × 2 = ) 48th tetrahedral number equals to (70 2 × 2 2 = 140 2 = ) 19600. This is comparable with the 24th square pyramid having a total of 70 2 cannonballs. [5]
Each layer represents one of the first five triangular numbers. A truncated triangular pyramid number [1] is found by removing some smaller tetrahedral number (or triangular pyramidal number) from each of the vertices of a bigger tetrahedral number. The number to be removed may be same or different from each of the vertices. [2]
It was fun to try to peck out words. 53045 looked like “shoes.” 5508 resembled “boss.” 37818 was “Bible” and 7734 was “hell.” This eventually led to the forbidden number 5318008.
The sum of the first six triangular numbers (making it a tetrahedral number). [1] The number of ways to choose 3 out of 8 objects or 5 out of 8 objects, if order does not matter. The sum of six consecutive primes (3 + 5 + 7 + 11 + 13 + 17) a tetranacci number [2] and as a multiple of 7 and 8, a pronic number. [3]
The incident occurred when Kelce was in town to appear on ESPN's "College GameDay" before Penn State faced Ohio State in a clash of then-top 5 teams.