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39 (number)

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← 38 39 40 →
Cardinalthirty-nine
Ordinalth
Factorization
Divisors1, 3, 13, 39
Greek numeralΛΘ´
Roman numeralXXXIX
Binary1001112
Ternary11103
Senary1036
Octal478
Duodecimal3312
Hexadecimal2716

39 (thirty-nine) is the natural number following 38 and preceding 40.

In mathematics

39 is the 12th distinct semiprime and the 4th in the {3.q} family. It is the last member of the third distinct biprime pair (38,39).

Thirty-nine is the sum of five consecutive primes (3 + 5 + 7 + 11 + 13) and the sum of the first three powers of 3 (). Given 39, the Mertens function returns 0.

39 is the smallest natural number which has three partitions into three parts which all give the same product when multiplied: {25, 8, 6}, {24, 10, 5}, {20, 15, 4}.

39 has an aliquot sum of 17 which is itself a prime. 39 is the 4th member of the 17-aliquot tree

The thirteenth Perrin number is 39, which comes after 17, 22, 29 (it is the sum of the first two mentioned).

Since the greatest prime factor of 392 + 1 = 1522 is 761, which is obviously more than 39 twice, 39 is a Størmer number.

According to David Wells in The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers, 39 is the smallest mathematically uninteresting number. The book claims that it is also the first number that is simultaneously both interesting and uninteresting, thereby avoiding the paradox.

In science

Astronomy

In religion

In other fields

Arts and entertainment


History
  • The number of signers to the United States Constitution, out of 55 members of the Philadelphia Convention delegates
  • The traditional number of times citizens of Ancient Rome hit their slaves when beating them, referred to as "Forty save one"
  • The duration, in nanoseconds, of the nuclear reaction in the largest nuclear explosion ever performed (Tsar bomb)
  • The number of Scud missiles which Iraq fired at Israel during the Gulf War in 1991
Other
At age 39

Historical years

39 A.D., 39 B.C., 1939, 2039, etc.