105 (number)

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Template:Infobox number 105 (one hundred [and] five) is the natural number following 104 and preceding 106.

In mathematics

105 is the 14th triangular number,[1] a dodecagonal number,[2] and the first Zeisel number.[3] It is the first odd sphenic number and is the product of three consecutive prime numbers. 105 is the double factorial of 7.[4] It is also the sum of the first five square pyramidal numbers.

105 comes in the middle of the prime quadruplet (101, 103, 107, 109). The only other such numbers less than a thousand are 9, 15, 195, and 825.

105 is also the middle of the only prime sextuplet (97, 101, 103, 107, 109, 113) between the ones occurring at 7-23 and at 16057–16073. 105 is the product of the first three odd primes (3×5×7) and is less than the square of the next prime (11) by > 8. Therefore, for n=105, n ± 2, ± 4, and ± 8 must be prime (a prime k-tuple). In contrast, n ± 6, ± 10, ± 12, and ± 14 must be composite, making a prime gap on either side.

105 is also a pseudoprime to the prime bases 13, 29, 41, 43, 71, 83, and 97. The distinct prime factors of 105 add up to 15, and so do those of 104; hence, the two numbers form a Ruth-Aaron pair under the first definition.

105 is also a number n for which n2k is prime, for 0<k<log2(n). (This even works up to k=8, ignoring the negative sign.)

105 is the smallest integer such that the factorization of xn1 over Q includes non-zero coefficients other than ±1. In other words, the 105th cyclotomic polynomial, Φ105, is the first with coefficients other than ±1.

105 is the number of parallelogram polyominoes with 7 cells.[5]

References

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