5,014
5,014 is a composite number, even.
Properties
- Parity
- Even
- Digit count
- 4
- Digit sum
- 10
- Digit product
- 0
- Digital root
- 1
- Palindrome
- No
- Bit width
- 13 bits
- Reversed
- 4,105
- Recamán's sequence
- a(2,092) = 5,014
- Square (n²)
- 25,140,196
- Cube (n³)
- 126,052,942,744
- Divisor count
- 8
- σ(n) — sum of divisors
- 7,920
- φ(n) — Euler's totient
- 2,376
- Sum of prime factors
- 134
Primality
Prime factorization: 2 × 23 × 109
Divisors & multiples
Sums & aliquot sequence
Representations
- In words
- five thousand fourteen
- Ordinal
- 5014th
- Binary
- 1001110010110
- Octal
- 11626
- Hexadecimal
- 0x1396
- Base64
- E5Y=
- One's complement
- 60,521 (16-bit)
Historical numeral systems
- Babylonian (base 60)
- 𒁹 𒌋𒌋𒁹𒁹𒁹 𒌋𒌋𒌋𒁹𒁹𒁹𒁹
- Egyptian hieroglyphic
- 𓆼𓆼𓆼𓆼𓆼𓎆𓏺𓏺𓏺𓏺
- Greek (Milesian)
- ͵ειδʹ
- Mayan (base 20)
- 𝋬·𝋪·𝋮
- Chinese
- 五千零一十四
- Chinese (financial)
- 伍仟零壹拾肆
Digit at this position in famous constants
- π — Pi (π)
- Digit 5,014 = 6
- e — Euler's number (e)
- Digit 5,014 = 4
- φ — Golden ratio (φ)
- Digit 5,014 = 4
- √2 — Pythagoras's (√2)
- Digit 5,014 = 7
- ln 2 — Natural log of 2
- Digit 5,014 = 2
- γ — Euler-Mascheroni (γ)
- Digit 5,014 = 6
Also seen as
Goldbach's conjecture says every even integer greater than 2 is the sum of two primes. For 5014, here are decompositions:
- 3 + 5011 = 5014
- 5 + 5009 = 5014
- 11 + 5003 = 5014
- 41 + 4973 = 5014
- 47 + 4967 = 5014
- 71 + 4943 = 5014
- 83 + 4931 = 5014
- 137 + 4877 = 5014
Showing the first eight; more decompositions exist.
UTF-8 encoding: E1 8E 96 (3 bytes).
As an unsigned 32-bit integer, this is the IPv4 address 0.0.19.150.
- Address
- 0.0.19.150
- Class
- reserved
- IPv4-mapped IPv6
- ::ffff:0.0.19.150
Unspecified address (0.0.0.0/8) — "this network" placeholder.
The digit sequence 5014 first appears in π at position 1,634 of the decimal expansion (the 1,634ordinal-suffix:th digit after the integer 3).
Search range: the first 1,000,000 fractional digits of π. Any 6-digit-or-shorter string is virtually guaranteed to appear in there — the more interesting signal is the position.