89 (number)

From HandWiki
Short description: Natural number
← 88 89 90 →
Cardinaleighty-nine
Ordinal89th
(eighty-ninth)
Factorizationprime
Prime24th
Divisors1, 89
Greek numeralΠΘ´
Roman numeralLXXXIX
Binary10110012
Ternary100223
Quaternary11214
Quinary3245
Senary2256
Octal1318
Duodecimal7512
Hexadecimal5916
Vigesimal4920
Base 362H36

89 (eighty-nine) is the natural number following 88 and preceding 90.

In mathematics

89 is:

[math]\displaystyle{ \frac{1}{89}=\sum_{n=1}^\infty{F(n)\times 10^{-(n+1)}}=0.011235955\dots\ . }[/math]
  • a Markov number, appearing in solutions to the Markov Diophantine equation with other odd-indexed Fibonacci numbers.

M89 is the 10th Mersenne prime.

Although 89 is not a Lychrel number in base 10, it is unusual that it takes 24 iterations of the reverse and add process to reach a palindrome. Among the known non-Lychrel numbers in the first 10000 integers, no other number requires that many or more iterations. The palindrome reached is also unusually large: 8813200023188.[4]

There are exactly 1000 prime numbers between 1 and 892=7921. [5]

In science

Eighty-nine is:

In astronomy

In sports

  • The Oklahoma Redhawks, an American minor league baseball team, were formerly known as the Oklahoma 89ers (1962–1997). The number alludes to the Land Run of 1889, when the Unassigned Lands of Oklahoma were opened to white settlement. The team's home of Oklahoma City was founded during this event.
  • In Rugby, an "89" or eight-nine move is a phase following a scrum, in which the number 8 catches the ball and transfers it to number 9 (scrum half).
  • The Elite 89 Award is presented by the U.S. NCAA to the participant in each of the NCAA's 89 championship finals with the highest grade point average.
  • 89, a 2017 film about a football match, between Liverpool and Arsenal in 1989.

In other fields

TI-89

Eighty-nine is also:

  • The designation of Interstate 89, a freeway that runs from New Hampshire to Vermont[7]
  • The designation of U.S. Route 89, a north–south highway that runs from Montana to Arizona
  • The ISBN Group Identifier for books published in Korea
  • "Pop Song 89" by R.E.M.
  • A model of the Texas Instruments calculator TI-89
  • California Proposition 89, a 2006 California ballot initiative on campaign finance reform
  • The title of a currently-unreleased song by Bon Iver
  • The greatest number of verses in a chapter of a book of the Bible other than the Book of Psalms—specifically Numbers chapter 7.
  • The number of units of each colour in the board game Blokus
  • The number of the French department Yonne
  • Information Is Beautiful cites eighty-nine as one of the words censored on the Chinese internet.[8]

See also

References