number.wiki
Live analysis

101,084

101,084 is a composite number, even.

This number doesn't have a permanent NumberWiki page yet — what you see below is computed live. Pages get added to the permanent index when they're notable (years, primes, curated, etc.).
Deficient Number Happy Number Recamán's Sequence

Properties

Parity
Even
Digit count
6
Digit sum
14
Digital root
5
Palindrome
No
Reversed
480,101
Recamán's sequence
a(98,631) = 101,084
Divisor count
12
σ(n) — sum of divisors
181,944

Primality

Prime factorization: 2 2 × 37 × 683

Divisors & multiples

All divisors (12)
1 · 2 · 4 · 37 · 74 · 148 · 683 · 1366 · 2732 · 25271 · 50542 · 101084
Aliquot sum (sum of proper divisors): 80,860
Factor pairs (a × b = 101,084)
1 × 101084
2 × 50542
4 × 25271
37 × 2732
74 × 1366
148 × 683
First multiples
101,084 · 202,168 · 303,252 · 404,336 · 505,420 · 606,504 · 707,588 · 808,672 · 909,756 · 1,010,840

Representations

In words
one hundred one thousand eighty-four
Ordinal
101084th
Binary
11000101011011100
Octal
305334
Hexadecimal
0x18ADC
Base64
AYrc

Also seen as

Goldbach decomposition

Goldbach's conjecture says every even integer greater than 2 is the sum of two primes. For 101084, here are decompositions:

  • 3 + 101081 = 101084
  • 97 + 100987 = 101084
  • 103 + 100981 = 101084
  • 127 + 100957 = 101084
  • 157 + 100927 = 101084
  • 283 + 100801 = 101084
  • 337 + 100747 = 101084
  • 463 + 100621 = 101084

Showing the first eight; more decompositions exist.

Unicode codepoint
𘫜
Tangut Component-733
U+18ADC
Other letter (Lo)

UTF-8 encoding: F0 98 AB 9C (4 bytes).

Hex color
#018ADC
RGB(1, 138, 220)
IPv4 address

As an unsigned 32-bit integer, this is the IPv4 address 0.1.138.220.

Address
0.1.138.220
Class
reserved
IPv4-mapped IPv6
::ffff:0.1.138.220

Unspecified address (0.0.0.0/8) — "this network" placeholder.

Possible US patent number

This number falls in the range of US utility patent numbers. If it's a patent, it would be issued as US 101,084 and was likely granted around 1870.

Patent numbers below 100,000 are excluded as too ambiguous; modern numbering currently reaches roughly 12.5 million.