23 (number)

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23 (twenty-three) is the natural number following 22 and preceding 24. It is a prime number.

In mathematics

Twenty-three is the ninth prime number, the smallest odd prime that is not a twin prime.<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref> It is, however, a cousin prime with 19, and a sexy prime with 17 and 29; while also being the largest member of the first prime sextuplet (7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23).<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref> Twenty-three is also the next to last member of the first Cunningham chain of the first kind (2, 5, 11, 23, 47),<ref>Template:Cite OEIS

"2, 5, 11, 23, 47 is the complete Cunningham chain that begins with 2. Each term except the last is a Sophie Germain prime A005384."</ref> and the sum of the prime factors of the second set of consecutive discrete semiprimes, (21, 22). 23 is the smallest odd prime to be a highly cototient number, as the solution to <math>x-\phi(x)</math> for the integers 95, 119, 143, and 529.<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref>
Otherwise, <math>46 = 23 \times 2</math> is the largest even number that is not the sum of two abundant numbers.

Hilbert's problems are twenty-three problems in mathematics published by German mathematician David Hilbert in 1900.

Mersenne numbers

The first Mersenne number of the form <math>2^{n} - 1</math> that does not yield a prime number when inputting a prime exponent is <math> 2047 = 23 \times 89,</math> with <math>n=11.</math><ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref>

On the other hand, the second composite Mersenne number contains an exponent <math>n</math> of twenty-three: <math display=block>M_{23} = 2^{23} - 1 = 8\;388\;607 = 47 \times 178\;481</math>

The twenty-third prime number (83) is an exponent to the fourteenth composite Mersenne number, which factorizes into two prime numbers, the largest of which is twenty-three digits long when written in base ten:<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref><ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref> <math display=block>M_{83} = 967...407 = 167 \times 57\;912\;614\;113\;275\;649\;087\;721</math>

Further down in this sequence, the seventeenth and eighteenth composite Mersenne numbers have two prime factors each as well, where the largest of these are respectively twenty-two and twenty-four digits long, <math display=block> \begin{align} M_{103} & = 101 \ldots 007 = 2\;550\;183\;799 \times 3\;976\;656\;429\;941\;438\;590\;393 \\ M_{109} & = 649 \ldots 511 = 745\;988\;807 \times 870\;035\;986\;098\;720\;987\;332\;873 \\ \end{align} </math>

Where prime exponents for <math>M_{23}</math> and <math>M_{83}</math> add to 106, which lies in between prime exponents of <math>M_{103}</math> and <math>M_{109}</math>, the index of the latter two (17 and 18) in the sequence of Mersenne numbers sum to 35, which is the twenty-third composite number.<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref>

<math>23!</math> is twenty-three digits long in decimal, and there are only three other numbers <math>n</math> whose factorials generate numbers that are <math>n</math> digits long in base ten: 1, 22, and 24.

In geometry

The Leech lattice Λ24 is a 24-dimensional lattice through which 23 other positive definite even unimodular Niemeier lattices of rank 24 are built, and vice-versa. Λ24 represents the solution to the kissing number in 24 dimensions as the precise lattice structure for the maximum number of spheres that can fill 24-dimensional space without overlapping, equal to 196,560 spheres. These 23 Niemeier lattices are located at deep holes of radii Template:Math in lattice points around its automorphism group, Conway group <math>\mathbb C_{0}</math>. The Leech lattice can be constructed in various ways, which include:

Conway and Sloane provided constructions of the Leech lattice from all other 23 Niemeier lattices.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Twenty-three four-dimensional crystal families exist within the classification of space groups. These are accompanied by six enantiomorphic forms, maximizing the total count to twenty-nine crystal families.<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref> Five cubes can be arranged to form twenty-three free pentacubes, or twenty-nine distinct one-sided pentacubes (with reflections).<ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref><ref>Template:Cite OEIS</ref>

There are 23 three-dimensional uniform polyhedra that are cell facets inside uniform 4-polytopes that are not part of infinite families of antiprismatic prisms and duoprisms: the five Platonic solids, the thirteen Archimedean solids, and five semiregular prisms (the triangular, pentagonal, hexagonal, octagonal, and decagonal prisms).

23 Coxeter groups of paracompact hyperbolic honeycombs in the third dimension generate 151 unique Wythoffian constructions of paracompact honeycombs. 23 four-dimensional Euclidean honeycombs are generated from the <math>{\tilde{B}}_4</math> cubic group, and 23 five-dimensional uniform polytopes are generated from the <math>\mathrm D_{5}</math> demihypercubic group.

In two-dimensional geometry, the regular 23-sided icositrigon is the first regular polygon that is not constructible with a compass and straight edge or with the aide of an angle trisector (since it is neither a Fermat prime nor a Pierpont prime), nor by neusis or a double-notched straight edge.<ref>Arthur Baragar (2002) Constructions Using a Compass and Twice-Notched Straightedge, The American Mathematical Monthly, 109:2, 151-164, Template:Doi</ref> It is also not constructible with origami, however it is through other traditional methods for all regular polygons.<ref>P. Milici, R. Dawson The equiangular compass December 1st, 2012, The Mathematical Intelligencer, Vol. 34, Issue 4 https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Pietro_Milici2/publication/257393577_The_Equiangular_Compass/links/5d4c687da6fdcc370a8725e0/The-Equiangular-Compass.pdf</ref>

In religion

  • In Biblical numerology, it is associated with Psalm 23, also known as the Shepherd Psalm. It is possibly the most quoted and best known Psalm.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Miriam Dunson, A Very Present Help: Psalm Studies for Older Adults. New York: Geneva Press (1999): 91. "Psalm 23 is perhaps the most familiar, the most loved, the most memorized, and the most quoted of all the psalms."</ref>
  • Principia Discordia, the sacred text of Discordianism, holds that 23 (along with the discordian prime 5) is one of the sacred numbers of Eris, goddess of discord.

Film and television

  • In the TV series Lost, 23 is one of the 6 reoccurring numbers (4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42) that appear frequently throughout the show.

Other fields

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References

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