288 (number)

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Template:About Template:Infobox number 288 (two hundred [and] eighty-eight) is the natural number following 287 and preceding 289. Because 288 = 2 · 12 · 12, it may also be called "two gross" or "two dozen dozen".

In mathematics

Factorization properties

Because its prime factorization 288=2532 contains only the first two prime numbers 2 and 3, 288 is a 3-smooth number.[1] This factorization also makes it a highly powerful number, a number with a record-setting value of the product of the exponents in its factorization.[2][3] Among the highly abundant numbers, numbers with record-setting sums of divisors, it is one of only 13 such numbers with an odd divisor sum.[4]

Both 288 and Template:Nowrap are powerful numbers, numbers in which all exponents of the prime factorization are larger than one.[5][6][7] This property is closely connected to being highly abundant with an odd divisor sum: all sufficiently large highly abundant numbers have an odd prime factor with exponent one, causing their divisor sum to be even.[4][8] 288 and 289 form only the second consecutive pair of powerful numbers after Template:Nowrap

Factorial properties

288 is a superfactorial, a product of consecutive factorials, since[5][9][10] 288=1!2!3!4!=14233241. Coincidentally, as well as being a product of descending powers, 288 is a sum of ascending powers:[11] 288=11+22+33+44.

288 appears prominently in Stirling's approximation for the factorial, as the denominator of the second term of the Stirling series[12] n!2πn(ne)n(1+112n+1288n213951840n35712488320n4+).

Figurate properties

288 is connected to the figurate numbers in multiple ways. It is a pentagonal pyramidal number[13][14] and a dodecagonal number.[14][15] Additionally, it is the index, in the sequence of triangular numbers, of the fifth square triangular number:[14][16] 41616=2882892=2042.

Enumerative properties

There are 288 different ways of completely filling in a 4×4 sudoku puzzle grid.[17][18] For square grids whose side length is the square of a prime number, such as 4 or 9, a completed sudoku puzzle is the same thing as a "pluperfect Latin square", an n×n array in which every dissection into n rectangles of equal width and height to each other has one copy of each digit in each rectangle. Therefore, there are also 288 pluperfect Latin squares of order 4.[19] There are 288 different 2×2 invertible matrices modulo six,[20] and 288 different ways of placing two chess queens on a 6×6 board with toroidal boundary conditions so that they do not attack each other.[21] There are 288 independent sets in a 5-dimensional hypercube, up to symmetries of the hypercube.[22]

In other areas

In early 20th-century molecular biology, some mysticism surrounded the use of 288 to count protein structures, largely based on the fact that it is a smooth number.[23][24]

A common mathematical pun involves the fact that Template:Nowrap and that 144 is named as a gross: "Q: Why should the number 288 never be mentioned? A: it is two gross."[25]

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Integers