139 (number)

From HandWiki
Short description: Natural number
← 138 139 140 →
Cardinalone hundred thirty-nine
Ordinal139th
(one hundred thirty-ninth)
Factorizationprime
Prime34th
Divisors1, 139
Greek numeralΡΛΘ´
Roman numeralCXXXIX
Binary100010112
Ternary120113
Quaternary20234
Quinary10245
Senary3516
Octal2138
DuodecimalB712
Hexadecimal8B16
Vigesimal6J20
Base 363V36

139 (one hundred [and] thirty-nine) is the natural number following 138 and preceding 140.

In mathematics

139 is the 34th prime number. It is a twin prime with 137. Because 141 is a semiprime, 139 is a Chen prime. 139 is the smallest prime before a prime gap of length 10.[1]

This number is the sum of five consecutive prime numbers (19 + 23 + 29 + 31 + 37).

It is the smallest factor of 64079 which is the smallest Lucas number with prime index which is not prime. It is also the smallest factor of the first nine terms of the Euclid–Mullin sequence, making it the tenth term.

139 is a happy number[2] and a strictly non-palindromic number.[3]

In the military

In transportation

  • British Rail Class 139 is the TOPS classification assigned to the lightweight railcars by West Midlands Trains on the Stourbridge Town Branch Line
  • Fiat M139 platform is the next-generation premium rear wheel drive automobile platform from Fiat
  • London Buses route 139 is a Transport for London contracted bus route in London

In other fields

139 is also:

  • The year AD 139 or 139 BC
  • 139 AH is a year in the Islamic calendar that corresponds to 756 – 757 CE.
  • 139 Juewa is a large and dark main belt asteroid discovered in 1874
  • The atomic number of untriennium, an unsynthesized chemical element
  • Gull Lake No. 139 is a rural municipality in Saskatchewan, Canada
  • Sonnet 139 by William Shakespeare
  • 139 Rb Gahhie is a village in Chak Jhumra Tehsil in the Punjab province of Pakistan
  • Miss 139 was a 1921 film starring Diana Allen and Marc McDermott
  • Motorola C139 model cellphone

See also

  • List of highways numbered 139
  • M139 (disambiguation)
  • United Nations Security Council Resolution 139
  • United States Supreme Court cases, Volume 139

References

  1. Wells, D. The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers London: Penguin Group. (1987): 139
  2. "Sloane's A007770 : Happy numbers". OEIS Foundation. https://oeis.org/A007770. 
  3. "Sloane's A016038 : Strictly non-palindromic numbers". OEIS Foundation. https://oeis.org/A016038. 

External links