| Cardinal | 8 eight |
| Ordinal | 8th eighth |
| Numeral system | octal |
| Factorization | |
| Divisors | 1, 2, 4, 8 |
| Roman numeral | VIII |
| Unicode representation of Roman numeral | Ⅷ, ⅷ |
| prefixes | octa-/oct- (from Greek) | octo-/oct- (from Latin)
| Binary | 1000 |
| Octal | 10 |
| Duodecimal | 8 |
| Hexadecimal | 8 |
| Hebrew | ח (Het) |
8 is the base of the octal number system, which is mostly used with computers. In octal, one digit represents 3 bits. In modern computers, a byte is a grouping of eight bits, also called an octet.
The number 8 is a Fibonacci number, being 3 plus 5. The next Fibonacci number is 13.
In binary code eight is 1000; in ternary code eight is 22; in quaternary numeral system code eight is 20; in quinary eight is 13; in senary eight is 12; in septenary eight is 11; in octal eight is 10; in novenary code and all codes above (such as decimal and hexadecimal) eight is 8. In Roman numerals eight is VIII.
A polygon with eight sides is an octagon. Figurate numbers representing octagons (including eight) are called octagonal numbers. A polyhedron with eight faces is an octahedron.
Sphenic numbers always have exactly eight divisors.
8 is the dimension of the octonions and is the highest possible dimension of a normed division algebra.
The number 8 is involved with a number of interesting mathematical phenomena related to the notion of Bott periodicity. For example if is the direct limit of the inclusions of real orthogonal groups then . Clifford algebras also display a periodicity of 8. For example the algebra is isomorphic to the algebra of 16 by 16 matrices with entries in . We also see a period of 8 in the K theory of spheres and in the representation theory of the rotation groups, the latter giving rise to the 8 by 8 spinorial chessboard. All of these properties are closely related to the properties of the octonions.
The lowest dimensional even unimodular lattice is the 8-dimensional E8 lattice. Even positive definite unimodular lattice exist only in dimensions divisible by 8.
In the beginning, various groups in India wrote eight more or less in one stroke as a curve that looks like an uppercase H with the bottom half of the left line and the upper half of the right line removed. At one point this glyph came close to looking like our modern five. With the western Ghubar Arabs, the similarity of the glyph to five was banished by connecting the beginning and the end of stroke together, and it was only a matter of the Europeans rounding the glyph that led to our modern eight.
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8 (عدد) | 8 | Vuit | 8 (tal) | Acht | Ocho | Ok (nombro) | Zortzi | 8 (nombre) | 8 | Otto | 8 (מספר) | Octo | 8 (skaičius) | 8 (szám) | Chicuēyi | 8 (getal) | 8 | Otto | 8 (tall) | Talet 8 | 8 (liczba) | Oito | 8 (число) | 8 (število) | 8 (luku) | 8 (tal) | 8 (bilang) | 8 | 8 (sayı) | 8
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"8 (number)".
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