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[7] [8] [9] It is widely believed, [10] but not proven, that no odd perfect numbers exist; numerous restrictive conditions have been proven, [10] including a lower bound of 10 1500. [11] The following is a list of all 52 currently known (as of January 2025) Mersenne primes and corresponding perfect numbers, along with their exponents p.
The first known European mention of the fifth perfect number is a manuscript written between 1456 and 1461 by an unknown mathematician. [10] In 1588, the Italian mathematician Pietro Cataldi identified the sixth (8,589,869,056) and the seventh (137,438,691,328) perfect numbers, and also proved that every perfect number obtained from Euclid's ...
The Nth Prime Page Nth prime through n=10^12, pi(x) through x=3*10^13, Random primes in same range. Interface to a list of the first 98 million primes (primes less than 2,000,000,000) Weisstein, Eric W. "Prime Number Sequences". MathWorld. Selected prime related sequences in OEIS.
In mathematics, a square number or perfect square is an integer that is the square of an integer; [1] in other words, it is the product of some integer with itself. For example, 9 is a square number, since it equals 3 2 and can be written as 3 × 3 .
M 4,423 was the first prime discovered with more than 1000 digits, M 44,497 was the first with more than 10,000, and M 6,972,593 was the first with more than a million. In general, the number of digits in the decimal representation of M n equals ⌊n × log 10 2⌋ + 1, where ⌊x⌋ denotes the floor function (or equivalently ⌊log 10 M n ...
In particular, τ(n) equals the product of the incremented by 1 exponents from the prime signature of n. For example, 20 has prime signature {2,1} and so the number of divisors is (2+1) × (1+1) = 6. Indeed, there are six divisors: 1, 2, 4, 5, 10 and 20. The smallest number of each prime signature is a product of primorials. The first few are:
Super Bowl Squares are the second most popular office sports betting tradition in the United States (No. 1: March Madness brackets), maybe because the outcome is based entirely on luck. Here's how ...
A square whose side length is a triangular number can be partitioned into squares and half-squares whose areas add to cubes. From Gulley (2010).The n th coloured region shows n squares of dimension n by n (the rectangle is 1 evenly divided square), hence the area of the n th region is n times n × n.