Base-dependent integer sequences | Classes of prime numbers

Dihedral prime

A dihedral prime or dihedral calculator prime is a prime number that still reads like itself or another prime number when read in a seven-segment display, regardless of orientation (normally or upside down), and surface (actual display or reflection on a mirror). The first few decimal dihedral primes are 2, 5, 11, 101, 181, 1181, 1811, 18181, 108881, 110881, 118081, 120121, 121021, 121151, 150151, 151051, 151121, 180181, 180811, 181081 (sequence in the OEIS). The smallest dihedral prime that reads differently with each orientation and surface combination is 120121 which becomes 121021 (upside down), 151051 (mirrored), and 150151 (both upside down and mirrored). The digits 0, 1 and 8 remain the same regardless of orientation or surface (the fact that 1 moves from the right to the left of the seven-segment cell when reversed is ignored). 2 and 5 remain the same when viewed upside down, and turn into each other when reflected in a mirror. In the display of a calculator that can handle hexadecimal, 3 would become E upon either reflection or upside down arrangement, but E being an even digit, the three cannot be used as the first digit because the reflected number will be even. Though 6 and 9 become each other upside down, they are not valid digits when reflected, at least not in any of the numeral systems pocket calculators usually operate in. Similarly, A is kept unchanged upon reflection, but its upside down image is not a valid digit. In addition, d and b are reflections of each other (in seven-segment display representations of hexadecimal digits, b and d are usually represented as lowercase while A, C, E and F are presented in uppercase), but their upside down images are not valid digits either. (Much as the case is with strobogrammatic numbers, whether a number, whether prime, composite or otherwise, is dihedral partially depends on the typeface being used. In handwriting, a 2 drawn with a loop at its base can be strobogrammatic to a 6, numbers that are of little use for the purpose of prime numbers; in the character design used on U.S. dollar bills, 5 reflects to a 7 when reflected in a mirror, while 2 resembles a 7 upside down.) Strobogrammatic primes that don't use 6 or 9 are dihedral primes. This includes repunit primes and all other palindromic primes which only contain digits 0, 1 and 8 (in binary, all palindromic primes are dihedral). It appears to be unknown whether there exist infinitely many dihedral primes, but this would follow from the conjecture that there are infinitely many repunit primes. The palindromic prime 10180054 + 8×(1058567−1)/9×1060744 + 1, discovered in 2009 by Darren Bedwell, is 180,055 digits long and may be the largest known dihedral prime as of 2009. (Wikipedia).

Dihedral prime
Video thumbnail

Find the reference angle of a angle larger than 2pi

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

Find the reference angle of an angle in radians in the third quadrant

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

How to find the reference angle of a negative angle in terms of pi

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

Learning to find the reference angle by using coterminal angle

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

Sketch the angle then find the reference angle

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

How to find the reference angle of an angle larger than 2pi

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

Introduction to Reference Angles

Please Subscribe here, thank you!!! https://goo.gl/JQ8Nys Introduction to Reference Angles

From playlist Reference Angles

Video thumbnail

Find the reference angle of an angle in radians in standard form

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

Learn to find the reference angle of a negative angle in terms of pi

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Video thumbnail

Automorphy of mod 3 representations over CM fields - Chandrashekhar Khare

Workshop on Motives, Galois Representations and Cohomology Around the Langlands Program Topic: Automorphy of mod 3 representations over CM fields Speaker: Chandrashekhar Khare Affiliation: University of California, Los Angeles Date: November 7, 2017 For more videos, please visit http://

From playlist Mathematics

Video thumbnail

Why Normal Subgroups are Necessary for Quotient Groups

Proof that cosets are disjoint: https://youtu.be/uxhAUmgSHnI In order for a subgroup to create a quotient group (also known as factor group), it must be a normal subgroup. That means that when we conjugate an element in the subgroup, it stays in the subgroup. In this video, we explain wh

From playlist Group Theory

Video thumbnail

Abstract Algebra - 1.3 The Dihedral Groups

Building on what we now know about the symmetries of a square, we generalize to what we can determine about any of the dihedral groups for n=3 or greater for regular n-gons (equilateral triangle, square, regular pentagon, etc.) Video Chapters: Intro 0:00 Recap of Cayley Tables 0:08 D3, D4

From playlist Abstract Algebra - Entire Course

Video thumbnail

Sophie Morel - Intersection cohomology of Shimura varieties and pizza

Correction: The affiliation of Lei Fu is Tsinghua University. Given a disc in the plane select any point in the disc and cut the disc by four lines through this point that are equally spaced. We obtain eight slices of the disc, each having angle π/4 at the point. The pizza theorem says th

From playlist Conférence « Géométrie arithmétique en l’honneur de Luc Illusie » - 5 mai 2021

Video thumbnail

Group theory 13: Dihedral groups

This lecture is part of an online mathematics course on group theory. It covers some basic properties of dihedral groups.

From playlist Group theory

Video thumbnail

Kieran Child - Computation of weight 1 modular forms

A major achievement of modern number theory is the proof of a bijection between odd, irreducible, 2-dimensional Artin representations and holomorphic weight 1 Hecke eigenforms. Despite this result, concrete examples have proven difficult to produce owing to weight 1 being non-cohomological

From playlist École d'Été 2022 - Cohomology Geometry and Explicit Number Theory

Video thumbnail

Lie Groups and Lie Algebras: Lesson 42 Group Theory Review #1

Lie Groups and Lie Algebras: Lesson 42 Group Theory Review #1\ In order to push on with Lie Group Theory, it is reasonable to do a good review of group theory itself. This is the first lecture of such a review. A link to the Group Explorer: https://nathancarter.github.io/group-explorer/

From playlist Lie Groups and Lie Algebras

Video thumbnail

Visual Group Theory, Lecture 2.2: Dihedral groups

Cyclic groups describe the symmetry of objects that exhibit only rotational symmetry, like a pinwheel. Dihedral groups describe the symmetry of objects that exhibit rotational and reflective symmetry, like a regular n-gon. The corresponding dihedral group D_n has 2n elements: half are rota

From playlist Visual Group Theory

Video thumbnail

The Unipotent Mixing Conjecture - Valentin Blomer

Workshop on Dynamics, Discrete Analysis and Multiplicative Number Theory Topic: The Unipotent Mixing Conjecture Speaker: Valentin Blomer Affiliation: Universität Bonn Date: February 27 2023 Abstract: Low-lying horocycles are known to equidistribute on the modular curve. Here we consider

From playlist Mathematics

Video thumbnail

Group theory 24: Extra special groups

This lecture is part of an online mathematics course on group theory. It covers groups of order p^3. The non-abelian ones are examples of extra special groups, a sort of analog of the Heisenberg groups of quantum mechanics.

From playlist Group theory

Video thumbnail

How to determine the reference angle of an angle in degrees

👉 Learn how to find the reference angle of a given angle. The reference angle is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle and the x-axis. To find the reference angle, we determine the quadrant on which the given angle lies and use the reference angle formula for the quadrant

From playlist Find the Reference Angle

Related pages

Prime number | Hexadecimal | Strobogrammatic number | Repunit prime | Decimal | Palindromic prime