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101,358

101,358 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.).
Abundant Number Happy Number Harshad / Niven

Properties

Parity
Even
Digit count
6
Digit sum
18
Digital root
9
Palindrome
No
Reversed
853,101
Divisor count
16
σ(n) — sum of divisors
225,360

Primality

Prime factorization: 2 × 3 3 × 1877

Divisors & multiples

All divisors (16)
1 · 2 · 3 · 6 · 9 · 18 · 27 · 54 · 1877 · 3754 · 5631 · 11262 · 16893 · 33786 · 50679 · 101358
Aliquot sum (sum of proper divisors): 124,002
Factor pairs (a × b = 101,358)
1 × 101358
2 × 50679
3 × 33786
6 × 16893
9 × 11262
18 × 5631
27 × 3754
54 × 1877
First multiples
101,358 · 202,716 · 304,074 · 405,432 · 506,790 · 608,148 · 709,506 · 810,864 · 912,222 · 1,013,580

Representations

In words
one hundred one thousand three hundred fifty-eight
Ordinal
101358th
Binary
11000101111101110
Octal
305756
Hexadecimal
0x18BEE
Base64
AYvu

Also seen as

Goldbach decomposition

Goldbach's conjecture says every even integer greater than 2 is the sum of two primes. For 101358, here are decompositions:

  • 11 + 101347 = 101358
  • 17 + 101341 = 101358
  • 71 + 101287 = 101358
  • 79 + 101279 = 101358
  • 137 + 101221 = 101358
  • 149 + 101209 = 101358
  • 151 + 101207 = 101358
  • 197 + 101161 = 101358

Showing the first eight; more decompositions exist.

Unicode codepoint
𘯮
Khitan Small Script Character-18Bee
U+18BEE
Other letter (Lo)

UTF-8 encoding: F0 98 AF AE (4 bytes).

Hex color
#018BEE
RGB(1, 139, 238)
IPv4 address

As an unsigned 32-bit integer, this is the IPv4 address 0.1.139.238.

Address
0.1.139.238
Class
reserved
IPv4-mapped IPv6
::ffff:0.1.139.238

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 101,358 and was likely granted around 1870.

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