73 (number)

Natural number From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

73 (seventy-three) is the natural number following 72 and preceding 74.

Cardinalseventy-three
Ordinal73rd
(seventy-third)
Prime21st
Quick facts ← 72 73 74 →, Cardinal ...
72 73 74
Cardinalseventy-three
Ordinal73rd
(seventy-third)
Factorizationprime
Prime21st
Divisors1, 73
Greek numeralΟΓ´
Roman numeralLXXIII, lxxiii
Binary10010012
Ternary22013
Senary2016
Octal1118
Duodecimal6112
Hexadecimal4916
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In mathematics

73 is a prime number,[1] a twin prime (with 71), a Pierpont prime, and a star number.[2]

Sheldon prime

73 is the unique Sheldon prime, named as an homage to TV character Sheldon Cooper. Where 73 and 37 are part of the sequence of permutable primes and emirps in base-ten, a Sheldon prime as defined as satisfying "mirror" and "product" properties, where:[3]

  • 73 has 37 as the mirroring of its decimal digits. 73 is the 21st prime number, and 37 the 12th. The "mirror property" is fulfilled when 73 has a mirrored permutation of its digits (37) that remains prime. Similarly, their respective prime indices (21 and 12) in the list of prime numbers are also permutations of the same digits (1, and 2).
  • 73 is the 21st prime number. It satisfies the "product property" since the product of its decimal digits is precisely in equivalence with its index in the sequence of prime numbers. i.e., 21 = 7 × 3. On the other hand, 37 does not fulfill the product property, since, naturally, its digits also multiply to 21; therefore, the only number to fulfill this property between these two numbers is 73, and as such it is the only "Sheldon prime".

In other fields

73 is also:

  • Amateur radio operators and other morse code users commonly use the number 73 as a "92 Code" abbreviation for "best regards", typically when ending a QSO (a conversation with another operator). These codes also facilitate communication between operators who may not be native English speakers.[4] In Morse code, 73 is an easily recognized palindrome: ( - - · · ·   · · · - - ).
  • On a CB radio, 10-73 means "speed trap at..."

The Big Bang Theory

73 is Sheldon Cooper's favorite number in the television series The Big Bang Theory. He first expresses his love for it in episode 73, "The Alien Parasite Hypothesis" (2010).[5] Jim Parsons, who plays Cooper in the series, was born in 1973.[6] His character often wears a t-shirt with the number 73 on it.[7]

See also

References

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