137 (number)

From testwiki
Revision as of 16:55, 11 January 2025 by imported>WereSpielChequers (typo)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Infobox number 137 (one hundred [and] thirty-seven) is the natural number following 136 and preceding 138.

Mathematics

137 is:

  • the 33rd prime number; the next is 139, with which it comprises a twin prime, and thus 137 is a Chen prime.[1]
  • an Eisenstein prime with no imaginary part and a real part of the form 3n1.[2]
  • the fourth Stern prime.[3]
  • a Pythagorean prime: a prime number of the form 4n+1, where n=34 (137=4×34+1) or the sum of two squares 112+42=(121+16).[4]
  • a combination of three terms 43+3423=(64+818), cube of 4 + Triangular number T4+T2 on each cube face (along 3 axes) - peaks (single 6th peak as free link)
  • a strong prime in the sense that it is more than the arithmetic mean of its two neighboring primes.[5]
  • a strictly non-palindromic number[6] and a primeval number.[7]
  • a factor of 10001 (the other being 73) and the repdigit 11111111 (= 10001 × 1111).
  • using two radii to divide a circle according to the golden ratio yields sectors of approximately 137.51° (the golden angle) and 222° in degree system so 137 is the largest integer before it.
  • In decimal notation, 1/137 = 0.Template:Overline, so its period value happens to be palindromic and has a period length of only 8. However, this is only special to decimal, as in pentadecimal it (1/92) has a period length of twenty-four (24) and the period value is not at all palindromic.
  • a combination of 5! + 4! - 3! - 2! + 1!
Template:Center

Physics

  • 1/137 was once thought to be the exact value of the fine-structure constant. The fine-structure constant, a dimensionless physical constant, is approximately 1/137, and the astronomer Arthur Eddington conjectured in 1929 that its reciprocal was in fact precisely the integer 137, which he claimed could be "obtained by pure deduction".[8] This conjecture was not widely adopted, and by the 1940s, the experimental values for the constant were clearly inconsistent with the conjecture, being roughly 1/137.036.[9] In 2021, researchers at the Kastler Brossel Laboratory in Paris reported the most precise measurement yet, determining the value to be Template:Val with an accuracy of 81 parts per trillion.[10]
  • Physicist Leon M. Lederman numbered his home near Fermilab 137 based on the significance of the number to those in his profession. Lederman expounded on the significance of the number in his 1993 book The God Particle: If the Universe Is the Answer, What Is the Question?, noting that not only was it the inverse of the fine-structure constant, but was also related to the probability that an electron will emit or absorb a photon—i.e., Feynman's conjecture.Template:Refn He added that it also "contains the crux of electromagnetism (the electron), relativity (the velocity of light), and quantum theory (the Planck constant). It would be less unsettling if the relationship between all these important concepts turned out to be one or three or maybe a multiple of pi. But 137?" The number 137, according to Lederman, "shows up naked all over the place", meaning that scientists on any planet in the universe using whatever units they have for charge or speed, and whatever their version of the Planck constant may be, will all come up with 137, because it is a pure number. Lederman recalled that Richard Feynman had even suggested that all physicists put a sign in their offices with the number 137 to remind them of just how much they do not know.[11]

Jungian psychology and mysticism

  • 137 has been the subject of psychological speculation by Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Carl Jung concerning his theory of synchronicity. Jung and physicist Wolfgang Pauli, according to the book Jung, Pauli, and the Pursuit of a Scientific Obsession by Arthur I. Miller, Emeritus Professor of History and Philosophy of Science at University College London, Jung and Pauli struggled in their search for a primal number that everything in the world hinges on, as well as a desire to quantify the unconscious.[12][13]
  • Wolfgang Pauli had a series of significant dreams when he engaged in psychoanalysis with Carl Jung, published in the 12th volume of The Collected Works of C. G. Jung. The dreams were progressively sophisticated, and eventually described a mandalic "world clock", which might be a symbolic format describing an estimate of the inverse of fine structure constant: α^(-1) = π^1 + π^2 + 4π^3 = 137.036... . The "world-clock" was carried by a black flying bird and consist of three discs and three pulses : SMALL pulse consist of a small pointer on a blue vertical disc advancing by 1/32, representing π ; MIDDLE pulse was one completion of the vertial blue disc of 32 segments, representing π^2, which causes 1/32 advancement of a second outer horizontal disc; GREAT pulse being the complete rotation of the second horizontal disc, which contained 4 coloured sections standing 4 men holding 4 pendulums, representing 4π^3 . The completion of the second disc in the GREAT pulse will cause a full rotation of the third outer ring, which turns from black colour to golden. The function of three pulses of the World-Clock symbolically add up to 137 from π^1 + π^2 + 4π^3.
  • While Carl Jung and Wolfgang Pauli were fascinated with the number 137, their lives had been entwined with meaningful synchronicities with this number. Carl Jung was born on the 26 July 1875 (207th day of the 75th year) and died on the 6 June 1961 (157th day of the 61th year), 207days + 75years + 157days + 61years = 136 Years & 364 Days, which is one day from 137 years. Wolfgang Pauli died , as himself expected, in room 137 of the Red-Cross hospital at Zurich. Carl Jung's Magnum Opus title "Liber Novus", also bears an English Gematria value of 137. The English Gematria values of the initials of name of Carl Gustav Jung, also hinted a value of 137 with numbers 3,7,10.

Other uses

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Commons category

Template:Integers

  1. Template:Cite OEIS
  2. Template:Cite OEIS
  3. Template:Cite OEIS
  4. Template:Cite OEIS
  5. Template:Cite OEIS
  6. Template:Cite OEIS
  7. Template:Cite OEIS
  8. Eddington, A. S., The Constants of Nature in "The World of Mathematics", Vol. 2 (1956) Ed. Newman, J. R., Simon and Schuster, pp. 1074-1093.
  9. Helge Kragh, "Magic Number: A Partial History of the Fine-Structure Constant", Archive for History of Exact Sciences 57:5:395 (July, 2003) Template:Doi
  10. Template:Cite journal
  11. Lederman, L. M., The God Particle: If the Universe is the Answer, What is the Question? (1993), Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, pp. 28–29.
  12. Template:Cite book
  13. Template:Cite web