273 (number)

From HandWiki

273 (two hundred [and] seventy-three) is the natural number following 272 and preceding 274.

Short description: Natural number
← 272 273 274 →
Cardinaltwo hundred seventy-three
Ordinal273rd
(two hundred seventy-third)
Factorization3 × 7 × 13
Greek numeralΣΟΓ´
Roman numeralCCLXXIII
Binary1000100012
Ternary1010103
Quaternary101014
Quinary20435
Senary11336
Octal4218
Duodecimal1A912
Hexadecimal11116
VigesimalDD20
Base 367L36

273 is a sphenic number, a truncated triangular pyramid number[1] and an idoneal number. There are 273 different ternary trees with five nodes.[2]

In other fields

The zero of the Celsius temperature scale is (to the nearest whole number) 273 kelvins. Thus, absolute zero (0 K) is approximately −273 °C.[3] The freezing temperature of water and the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water are both approximately 0 °C or 273 K.[4][5]

References

  1. Sloane, N. J. A., ed. "Sequence A051937 (Truncated triangular pyramid numbers))". OEIS Foundation. https://oeis.org/A051937. 
  2. Sloane, N. J. A., ed. "Sequence A001764 (Binomial(3n,n)/(2n+1) (enumerates ternary trees and also noncrossing trees))". OEIS Foundation. https://oeis.org/A001764. 
  3. James Shipman; Jerry Wilson; Charles Higgins (2012), An Introduction to Physical Science (13th ed.), Cengage Learning, p. 107, ISBN 9781133104094, https://books.google.com/books?id=dxoM93eNPVEC&pg=PA107 .
  4. Larry Kirkpatrick; Gregory Francis (2006), Physics: A World View (6th ed.), Cengage Learning, p. 219, ISBN 9780495010883, https://books.google.com/books?id=8hOLs-bmiYYC&pg=PA219 .
  5. Alphonso Hendricks; Loganathan Subramony; Charmaine Van Blerk (1999), Physics for Engineering, Juta and Company Ltd, p. 229, ISBN 9780702144080, https://books.google.com/books?id=8Kp-UwV4o0gC&pg=PA229 .