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This article discusses the number five. For the year 5 AD, see 5. For other uses of 5, including the UK television channel, see 5 (disambiguation)
{| width="250" border="1" style="float: right; background: #feffff; border-collapse: collapse; margin: 0.5em" Cardinal 5
five Ordinal 5th
fifth Numeral system quinary Factorization prime Divisors 1, 5 Roman numeral V Unicode representation of Roman numeral Ⅴ, ⅴ prefixes penta-/pent- (from Greek) quinque-/quinqu-/quint- (from Latin) Binary 101 Octal 5 Duodecimal 5 Hexadecimal 5 Vigesimal 5 Hebrew ה (He)

5 (five) is a number, numeral, and glyph. It is the natural number following 4 and preceding 6.

The SI prefix for 10005 is peta (P), and for its reciprocal femto (f).

In mathematics


Five is the second Sierpinski number of the first kind, and can be written as S2=(2^2)+1

Five is the third smallest prime number, after 2 and 3, and before 7. Because it can be written as 2^(2^1)+1, five is classified as a Fermat prime. 5 is the third Sophie Germain prime, the first safe prime, and the third Mersenne prime exponent. Five is the first Wilson prime and the third factorial prime, also an alternating factorial. It is an Eisenstein prime with no imaginary part and real part of the form 3n - 1. It is also the only number that is part of more than one pair of twin primes.

Five is the only prime number to end in the digit 5, because all other numbers written with a 5 in the ones-place under the decimal system are multiples of five. As a consequence of this, 5 is in base 10 a 1-automorphic number.

Five is a factor of 10, so vulgar fractions with 5 in the denominator do not yield infinite decimal expansions, unlike most other primes. When written in the decimal system, all multiples of 5 will end in either 5 or 0.

The number 5 is the 5th Fibonacci number, being 2 plus 3. 5 is also a Pell number and a Markov number, appearing in solutions to the Markov Diophantine equation: (1, 2, 5), (1, 5, 13), (2, 5, 29), (5, 13, 194), (5, 29, 433), ... ( lists Markov numbers that appear in solutions where one of the other two terms is 5).

There are five solutions to Znám's problem of length 6.

While polynomial equations of degree 4 and below can be solved with radicals, equations of degree 5 and higher cannot generally be so solved. This is the Abel-Ruffini theorem. This is related to the fact that the symmetric group Sn is a solvable group for n ≤ 4 and not solvable for n ≥ 5.

While all graphs with 4 or fewer vertices are planar, there exists a graph with 5 vertices which is not planar: K5, the complete graph with 5 vertices.

Five is also the number of Platonic solids.

A polygon with five sides is a pentagon. Figurate numbers representing pentagons (including five) are called pentagonal numbers. Five is also a square pyramidal number.

Five is the answer to the question asked at the very end of the mathematics quiz show in the movie Little Man Tate. (Our young protagonist blurts out the answer, but the host mishears it as being the answer from the contestant to whom the question is posed, and declares him the winner.)

In numbering systems

The Arabic glyph


The evolution of our modern glyph for five cannot be neatly traced back to the Brahmin Indians quite the same way it can for 1 to 4. Later on the Kushana and Gupta Indians had among themselves several different glyphs which bear no resemblance to the modern glyph. The Nagari and Punjabi took these glyphs and all came up with glyphs that look like a lowercase "h" rotated 180°. The Ghubar Arabs transformed the glyph in several different ways, coming up with glyphs that look more like 4s or 3s than 5s. It was from those characters that the Europeans finally came up with the modern 5, though from purely graphical evidence, it would be much easier to conclude that our modern 5 came from the Khmer.

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In science


Astronomy

In religion and culture


In music


In sports


In technology


  • The Pentium, coined by Intel Corporation, is a fifth-generation x86 architecture microprocessor.
  • On most telephones, the 5 key is associated with the letters J, K, and L, but on the BlackBerry it is the key for G and H.
  • On almost all devices with a numeric keypad such as telephones, computers, etc., the 5 key has a raised dot or raised bar to make dialing easier. Persons who are blind or have low vision find it useful to be able to feel the keys of a telephone. All other numbers can be found with their relative position around the 5 button. (On computer keyboards, the 5 key of the numpad has the raised dot or bar, but the 5 key that shifts with % does not).

In other fields


see also 5 (disambiguation)

Five is:

Historical years


5 A.D., 5 B.C., 1905, 2005, etc.

Integers

5 (عدد) | 5 | Cinc | Pump | 5 (tal) | Fünf | Cinco | Kvin | Bost | 5 (nombre) | 5 | Cinque | 5 (מספר) | Quinque | 5 (skaičius) | Mācuīlli | 5 (getal) | 5 | 5 (tall) | Talet 5 | 5 (liczba) | Cinco | 5 (число) | 5 (število) | 5 (luku) | 5 (tal) | 5 (bilang) | 5 | 5

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "5 (number)".

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