- 70 (number)
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70 Cardinal seventy Ordinal 70th
(seventieth)Factorization Divisors 1, 2, 5, 7, 10, 14, 35, 70 Roman numeral LXX Binary 10001102 Octal 1068 Duodecimal 5A12 Hexadecimal 4616 Hebrew ע (Ayin) 70 (seventy) is the natural number following 69 and preceding 71.
Contents
In mathematics
Its factorization makes it a sphenic number. 70 is a Pell number and a generalized heptagonal number, one of only two numbers to be both.[1] Also, it is the seventh pentagonal number and the fourth 13-gonal number, as well as the fifth pentatope number. It is the smallest weird number.
Since it is possible to find sequences of 70 consecutive integers such that each inner member shares a factor with either the first or the last member, 70 is an Erdős–Woods number.
In base 10, it is a Harshad number.
In science
- 70 is the atomic number of ytterbium, a lanthanide
Astronomy
- Messier object M70, a magnitude 9.0 globular cluster in the constellation Sagittarius
- The New General Catalogue object NGC 70, a magnitude 13.4 spiral galaxy in the constellation Andromeda
- The Saros number of the solar eclipse series which began on -821 September 5 and ended on 676 February. The duration of Saros series 70 was 1496.5 years, and it contained 84 solar eclipses. Further, the Saros number of the lunar eclipse series which began on -519 June 13 and ended on 761 July. The duration of Saros series 70 was 1280.1 years, and it contained 72 lunar eclipses.
In religion
- Seventy souls went down to Egypt to begin the Hebrew's Egyptian exile (Genesis 46:27)
- According to Jewish tradition, there is a core of 70 nations and 70 world languages.
- In Jewish tradition, there were 70 men in the Great Sanhedrin, the Supreme Court of ancient Israel. (Sanhedrin 1:4).
- Seventy elders were assembled by Moses on God's command in the desert (Numbers 11:16-30)
- Ptolemy II Philadelphus ordered 72 Jewish elders to translate the Torah into Greek; the result was the Septuagint (from the Latin for "seventy")
- The Roman numeral seventy, LXX, is the scholarly symbol for the Septuagint.
- In the Gospel of Matthew, 18:21-22, Jesus tells Peter to forgive people seventy times seven times.
- In the Gospel of Luke 10:1-24, Jesus appoints Seventy Disciples and sends them out in pairs to preach the Gospel.
- Seventy, a priesthood office of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
- The Old Testament allots three score and ten (70 years) for a man's life (Psalm 90:10)
In law
- 70 years: Expiration of public domain
In sports
- NASCAR J. D. McDuffie was known for driving car #70
- in Olympic Archery, the targets are 70 meters from the archers
In other fields
70 is:
- the designation of USA Interstate 70, a freeway that goes from Utah to Maryland
- Municipal Okrug 70, name of Kolomyagi Municipal Okrug of Primorsky District of Saint Petersburg, Russia, until February 2011
- In miles per hour, a common speed limit for freeways in many American states, primarily in the central United States (in the Eastern U.S. the speed limit is generally 65, in the Western U.S. it is 75).
- In miles per hour, the national speed limit in the United Kingdom (for cars and motorcycles on the best grades of road).[2]
- In years of marriage, the platinum wedding anniversary
- The hull number of the U.S. Navy's nuclear aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70), named after U.S. Representative Carl Vinson.
- The number of the French department Haute-Saône
- Historical years: AD 70, 70 BC, or 1970.
- The number 70 is frequently referenced by the musical duo Boards of Canada: they have songs titled "Sixtyten" (Music Has the Right to Children, 1998) and "The Smallest Weird Number" (Geogaddi, 2002), and their record label is named Music70.
- In the Far Eastern culture of China, Japan, Korea, etc., 70 years old is called the Rare Age of the Olden Times (古稀 Guxi in Chinese, 古稀 Koki in Japanese, 고희 Kohwi in Korean, etc.), as written in one of Du Fu’s poems. [3]
Number name
Main article: number nameThe French do not have a word for 70, instead using "soixante-dix" (60 + 10). Other French-speaking countries such as Belgium, Switzerland, Aosta Valley and Jersey do have a word for it, using "septante."[4]
Notes
- ^ Rao, B. Srinivasa (2005), "Heptagonal Numbers in the Pell Sequence and Diophantine Equations 2x2 = y2(5y − 3)2 ± 2", Fibonacci Quarterly 43 (3): 194–201.
- ^ The Official Highway Code, pub. Department for Transport (Revised 2007 Edition). ISBN 978-0-11-552814-9. A white circular sign with a black diagonal stripe indicates that the national speed limit applies. This depends on the vehicle type and grade of road. The table on p.40 shows the highest speed permitted to be 70mph, for normally-laden cars and motorcycles on dual-carriageways and motorways.
- ^ Guxi in Baidu Encyclopedia (Chinese: 七十岁,古来稀)
- ^ Peter Higgins, Number Story. London: Copernicus Books (2008): 19. "Belgian French speakers however grew tired of this and introduced the new names septante, octante, nonante etc. for these numbers."
Categories:- Integers
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