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163 (number)

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← 162 163 164 →
Cardinalone hundred sixty-three
Ordinal163rd
(one hundred sixty-third)
Factorizationprime
Prime38th
Divisors1, 163
Greek numeralΡΞΓ´
Roman numeralCLXIII
Binary101000112
Ternary200013
Senary4316
Octal2438
Duodecimal11712
HexadecimalA316

163 (one hundred [and] sixty-three) is the natural number following 162 and preceding 164.

In mathematics

163 is a strong prime in the sense that it is greater than the arithmetic mean of its two neighboring primes.

163 is a lucky prime[1] and a fortunate number.[2]

163 is a strictly non-palindromic number, since it is not palindromic in any base between base 2 and base 161.

Given 163, the Mertens function returns 0, it is the fourth prime with this property, the first three such primes are 2, 101 and 149.[3]

163 figures in an approximation of π, in which .

163 figures in an approximation of e, in which .

163 is a Heegner number, the largest of the nine such numbers. That is, the ring of integers of the field has unique factorization for . The only other such integers are . (sequence A003173 in the OEIS)

163 is a permutable prime in base 12, which it is written as 117, the permutations of its digits are 171 and 711, the two numbers in base 12 is 229 and 1021 in base 10, both of them are primes.

The function gives prime values for all values of between 0 and 39, and for approximately half of all values are prime. 163 appears as a result of solving , which gives .

appears in the Ramanujan constant, since -163 in a quadratic nonresidue to modulo all the primes 3, 5, 7, ..., 37. In which almost equals the integer 262537412640768744 = 6403203 + 744. Martin Gardner famously asserted that this identity was exact in a 1975 April Fools' hoax in Scientific American; in fact the value is 262537412640768743.99999999999925007259...

In astronomy

In the US military

In American sports

In transportation

In other fields

163 is also:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sloane's A031157 : Numbers that are both lucky and prime". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. Retrieved 2016-05-28.
  2. ^ "Sloane's A005235 : Fortunate numbers". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. Retrieved 2016-05-28.
  3. ^ "Sloane's A100669 : Zeros of the Mertens function that are also prime". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. Retrieved 2016-05-29.
  4. ^ Boise Weekly (July 2, 2008), "Generations of skateboarders keep rolling" by Katy Dang