30 (number)
Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox number 30 (thirty) is the natural number following 29 and preceding 31.
In mathematicsEdit
30 is an even, composite, and pronic number. With 2, 3, and 5 as its prime factors, it is a regular number and the first sphenic number, the smallest of the form Template:Nowrap, where Template:Mvar is a prime greater than 3. It has an aliquot sum of 42; within an aliquot sequence of thirteen composite numbers (30, 42, 54, 66, 78, 90, 144, 259, 45, 33, 15, 9, 4, 3, 1, 0) to the Prime in the 3-aliquot tree. From 1 to the number 30, this is the longest Aliquot Sequence.
It is also:
- A semiperfect number, since adding some subsets of its divisors (e.g., 5, 10 and 15) equals 30.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- A primorial.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- A Harshad number in decimal.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Divisible by the number of prime numbers (10) below it.
- The largest number such that all coprimes smaller than itself, except for 1, are prime.
- The sum of the first four squares, making it a square pyramidal number.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- The number of vertices in the Tutte–Coxeter graph.
- The measure of the central angle and exterior angle of a dodecagon, which is the petrie polygon of the 24-cell.
- The number of sides of a triacontagon, which in turn is the petrie polygon of the 120-cell and 600-cell.
- The number of edges of a dodecahedron and icosahedron, of vertices of an icosidodecahedron, and of faces of a rhombic triacontahedron.
- The sum of the number of elements of a 5-cell: 5 vertices, 10 edges, 10 faces, and 5 cells.
- The Coxeter number of E8.
- A largely composite number,<ref name="OEIS-A067128">Template:Cite OEIS</ref> as it has 8 divisors and no smaller number has more than 8 divisors
Furthermore,
In a group Template:Mvar, such that <math>|G|=p^{n}\times m</math>, where Template:Mvar does not divide Template:Mvar, and has a subgroup of order <math>p^{n}</math>, 30 is the only number less than 60 that is neither a prime nor of the aforementioned form. Therefore, 30 is the only candidate for the order of a simple group less than 60, in which one needs other methods to specifically reject to eventually deduce said order.Template:Citation needed
The SI prefix for 1030 is Quetta- (Q), and for 10−30 (i.e., the reciprocal of 1030) quecto (q). These numbers are the largest and smallest number to receive an SI prefix to date.
In other fieldsEdit
Thirty is:
- Used (as –30–) to indicate the end of a newspaper (or broadcast) story, a copy editor's typographical notation
- The number of days in the months April, June, September and November (and in unusual circumstances February—see February 30). Although the number of days in a month vary, 30 is used to estimate months elapsing.
- In years of marriage, the pearl wedding anniversary
History and literatureEdit
- Age 30 is when Jewish priests traditionally start their service (according to Numbers 4:3).
- One of the rallying cries of the 1960s student/youth protest movement was the slogan, "Don't trust anyone over thirty".
- In The Myth of Sisyphus the French existentialist Albert Camus comments that the age of thirty is a crucial period in the life of a man, for at that age he gains a new awareness of the meaning of time.
ReferencesEdit
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