- Source: 31 (number)
31 (thirty-one) is the natural number following 30 and preceding 32. It is a prime number.
Mathematics
31 is the 11th prime number. It is a superprime and a self prime (after 3, 5, and 7), as no integer added up to its base 10 digits results in 31. It is the third Mersenne prime of the form 2n − 1, and the eighth Mersenne prime exponent, in-turn yielding the maximum positive value for a 32-bit signed binary integer in computing: 2,147,483,647. After 3, it is the second Mersenne prime not to be a double Mersenne prime, while the 31st prime number (127) is the second double Mersenne prime, following 7. On the other hand, the thirty-first triangular number is the perfect number 496, of the form 2(5 − 1)(25 − 1) by the Euclid-Euler theorem. 31 is also a primorial prime like its twin prime (29), as well as both a lucky prime and a happy number like its dual permutable prime in decimal (13).
31 is the number of regular polygons with an odd number of sides that are known to be constructible with compass and straightedge, from combinations of known Fermat primes of the form 22n + 1 (they are 3, 5, 17, 257 and 65537).
Only two numbers have a sum-of-divisors equal to 31: 16 (1 + 2 + 4 + 8 + 16) and 25 (1 + 5 + 25), respectively the square of 4, and of 5. In total, only thirty-one integers are not the sum of distinct squares (31 is the sixteenth such number, where the largest is 124).
31 is the 11th and final consecutive supersingular prime. After 31, the only supersingular primes are 41, 47, 59, and 71.
31 is the first prime centered pentagonal number, the fifth centered triangular number, and the first non-trivial centered decagonal number.
For the Steiner tree problem, 31 is the number of possible Steiner topologies for Steiner trees with 4 terminals.
At 31, the Mertens function sets a new low of −4, a value which is not subceded until 110.
31 is a repdigit in base 2 (11111) and in base 5 (111).
The cube root of 31 is the value of π correct to four significant figures:
3
3
1
=
3.141
38065
…
{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{3}]{3}}1=3.141\;{\color {red}38065\;\ldots }}
The thirty-first digit in the fractional part of the decimal expansion for pi in base-10 is the last consecutive non-zero digit represented, starting from the beginning of the expansion (i.e, the thirty-second single-digit string is the first
0
{\displaystyle 0}
); the partial sum of digits up to this point is
155
=
31
×
5.
{\displaystyle 155=31\times 5.}
31 is also the prime partial sum of digits of the decimal expansion of pi after the eighth digit.
The first five Euclid numbers of the form p1 × p2 × p3 × ... × pn + 1 (with pn the nth prime) are prime:
3 = 2 + 1
7 = 2 × 3 + 1
31 = 2 × 3 × 5 + 1
211 = 2 × 3 × 5 × 7 + 1 and
2311 = 2 × 3 × 5 × 7 × 11 + 1
The following term, 30031 = 59 × 509 = 2 × 3 × 5 × 7 × 11 × 13 + 1, is composite. The next prime number of this form has a largest prime p of 31: 2 × 3 × 5 × 7 × 11 × 13 × ... × 31 + 1 ≈ 8.2 × 1033.
While 13 and 31 in base-ten are the proper first duo of two-digit permutable primes and emirps with distinct digits in base ten, 11 is the only two-digit permutable prime that is its own permutable prime. Meanwhile 1310 in ternary is 1113 and 3110 in quinary is 1115, with 1310 in quaternary represented as 314 and 3110 as 1334 (their mirror permutations 3314 and 134, equivalent to 61 and 7 in decimal, respectively, are also prime). (11, 13) form the third twin prime pair between the fifth and sixth prime numbers whose indices add to 11, itself the prime index of 31. Where 31 is the prime index of the fourth Mersenne prime, the first three Mersenne primes (3, 7, 31) sum to the thirteenth prime number, 41. 13 and 31 are also the smallest values to reach record lows in the Mertens function, of −3 and −4 respectively.
The numbers 31, 331, 3331, 33331, 333331, 3333331, and 33333331 are all prime. For a time it was thought that every number of the form 3w1 would be prime. However, the next nine numbers of the sequence are composite; their factorisations are:
333333331 = 17 × 19607843
3333333331 = 673 × 4952947
33333333331 = 307 × 108577633
333333333331 = 19 × 83 × 211371803
3333333333331 = 523 × 3049 × 2090353
33333333333331 = 607 × 1511 × 1997 × 18199
333333333333331 = 181 × 1841620626151
3333333333333331 = 199 × 16750418760469 and
33333333333333331 = 31 × 1499 × 717324094199.
The next term (3171) is prime, and the recurrence of the factor 31 in the last composite member of the sequence above can be used to prove that no sequence of the type RwE or ERw can consist only of primes, because every prime in the sequence will periodically divide further numbers.
31 is the maximum number of areas inside a circle created from the edges and diagonals of an inscribed six-sided polygon, per Moser's circle problem. It is also equal to the sum of the maximum number of areas generated by the first five n-sided polygons: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and as such, 31 is the first member that diverges from twice the value of its previous member in the sequence, by 1.
Icosahedral symmetry contains a total of thirty-one axes of symmetry; six five-fold, ten three-fold, and fifteen two-fold.
In science
The atomic number of gallium
= Astronomy
=Messier object M31, a magnitude 4.5 galaxy in the constellation Andromeda. It is also known as the Andromeda Galaxy, and is readily visible to the naked eye in a modestly dark sky.
The New General Catalogue object NGC 31, a spiral galaxy in the constellation Phoenix
In sports
Ice hockey goaltenders often wear the number 31.
In other fields
Thirty-one is also:
The number of days in each of the months January, March, May, July, August, October and December
The number of the date that Halloween and New Year's Eve are celebrated
The code for international direct-dial phone calls to the Netherlands
Thirty-one, a card game
The number of kings defeated by the incoming Israelites in Canaan according to Joshua 12:24: "all the kings, one and thirty" (Wycliffe Bible translation)
A type of game played on a backgammon board
The number of flavors of Baskin-Robbins ice cream; the shops are called 31 Ice Cream in Japan
ISO 31 is the ISO's standard for quantities and units
In the title of the anime Ulysses 31
In the title of Nick Hornby's book 31 Songs
A women's honorary at The University of Alabama (XXXI)
The number of the French department Haute-Garonne
In music, 31-tone equal temperament is a historically significant tuning system (31 equal temperament), first theorized by Christiaan Huygens and promulgated in the 20th century by Adriaan Fokker
Number of letters in Macedonian alphabet
Number of letters in Ottoman alphabet
A slang term for masturbation in Turkish.
Notes
References
External links
Prime Curios! 31 from the Prime Pages
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Secret Number
- ISSN
- 31 (angka)
- ISBN
- The Number (buku)
- Nomor Seri Internment
- Angka paling mungkin
- Tomboi
- Duane W. Roller
- Nomor seri elektronik
- 31 (number)
- 31
- One: Number 31, 1950
- List of highways numbered 31
- Jackson Pollock
- WOW Number 1s
- Shenyang J-35
- Euclid number
- ISO 31
- 1000 (number)