List of numbers


This is a list of articles about numbers. Due to the infinitude of many sets of numbers, this list will invariably be incomplete. Hence, only particularly notable numbers will be included. Numbers may be included in the list based on their mathematical, historical or cultural notability, but all numbers have qualities which could arguably make them notable. Even the least "interesting" number is paradoxically interesting for that very property. This is known as the interesting number paradox.
The definition of what is classed as a number is rather diffuse and based on historical distinctions. For example the pair of numbers is commonly regarded as a number when it is in the form of a complex number, but not when it is in the form of a vector. This list will also be categorised with the standard convention of types of numbers.
This list focuses on numbers as mathematical objects and is not a list of numerals, which are linguistic devices: nouns, adjectives, or adverbs that designate numbers. The distinction is drawn between the number five, and the numeral five.

Natural numbers

The natural numbers are a subset of the integers and are of historical and pedagogical value as they can be used for counting and often have ethno-cultural significance. Beyond this, natural numbers are widely used as a building block for other number systems including the integers, rational numbers and real numbers. Natural numbers are those used for counting and ordering. In common language, words used for counting are "cardinal numbers" and words used for ordering are "ordinal numbers". Defined by the Peano axioms, the natural numbers form an infinitely large set.
The inclusion of 0 in the set of natural numbers is ambiguous and subject to individual definitions. In set theory and computer science, 0 is typically considered a natural number. In number theory, it usually is not. The ambiguity can be solved with the terms "non-negative integers", which includes 0, and "positive integers", which does not.
Natural numbers may be used as cardinal numbers, which may go by various names. Natural numbers may also be used as ordinal numbers.

Mathematical significance

Natural numbers may have properties specific to the individual number or may be part of a set of numbers with a particular property.

Cultural or practical significance

Along with their mathematical properties, many integers have cultural significance or are also notable for their use in computing and measurement. As mathematical properties can confer practical utility, there may be interplay and connections between the cultural or practical significance of an integer and its mathematical properties.

Classes of natural numbers

Subsets of the natural numbers, such as the prime numbers, may be grouped into sets, for instance based on the divisibility of their members. Infinitely many such sets are possible. A list of notable classes of natural numbers may be found at.

Prime numbers

A prime number is a positive integer which has exactly two divisors: 1 and itself.
The first 100 prime numbers are:

Highly composite numbers

A highly composite number is a positive integer with more divisors than any smaller positive integer. They are often used in geometry, grouping and time measurement.
The first 20 highly composite numbers are:
1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, 120, 180, 240, 360, 720, 840, 1260, 1680, 2520, 5040, 7560.

Perfect numbers

A perfect number is an integer that is the sum of its positive proper divisors.
The first 10 perfect numbers:

Integers

The integers are a set of numbers commonly encountered in arithmetic and number theory. There are many subsets of the integers, including the natural numbers, prime numbers, perfect numbers, etc. Many integers are notable for their mathematical properties.
Notable integers include −1, the additive inverse of unity, and 0, the additive identity.
As with the natural numbers, the integers may also have cultural or practical significance. For instance, −40 is the equal point in the Fahrenheit and Celsius scales.

SI prefixes

One important use of integers is in orders of magnitude. A power of ten is a number 10k, where k is an integer. For instance, with k = 0, 1, 2, 3,..., the appropriate powers of ten are 1, 10, 100, 1000,... Powers of ten can also be fractional: for instance, k = -3 gives 1/1000, or 0.001. This is used in scientific notation, real numbers are written in the form m × 10n. The number 394,000 is written in this form as 3.94 × 105.
Integers are used as prefixes in the SI system. A metric prefix is a unit prefix that precedes a basic unit of measure to indicate a multiple or fraction of the unit. Each prefix has a unique symbol that is prepended to the unit symbol. The prefix kilo-, for example, may be added to gram to indicate multiplication by one thousand: one kilogram is equal to one thousand grams. The prefix milli-, likewise, may be added to metre to indicate division by one thousand; one millimetre is equal to one thousandth of a metre.
Value1000mName
10001Kilo
10002Mega
10003Giga
10004Tera
10005Peta
10006Exa
10007Zetta
10008Yotta

Rational numbers

A rational number is any number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction of two integers, a numerator and a non-zero denominator. Since may be equal to 1, every integer is trivially a rational number. The set of all rational numbers, often referred to as "the rationals", the field of rationals or the field of rational numbers is usually denoted by a boldface ; it was thus denoted in 1895 by Giuseppe Peano after , Italian for "quotient".
Rational numbers such as 0.12 can be represented in infinitely many ways, e.g. zero-point-one-two, three twenty-fifths, nine seventy-fifths, etc. This can be mitigated by representing rational numbers in a canonical form as an irreducible fraction.
A list of rational numbers is shown below. The names of fractions can be found at numeral.
Decimal expansionFractionNotability
1One is the multiplicative identity. One is trivially a rational number, as it is equal to 1/1.
-0.083 333...-1/12The value counter-intuitively ascribed to the series 1+2+3....
0.5One half occurs commonly in mathematical equations and in real world proportions. One half appears in the formula for the area of a triangle: × base × perpendicular height and in the formulae for figurate numbers, such as triangular numbers and pentagonal numbers.
3.142 857...22/7A widely used approximation for the number. It can be proven that this number exceeds.
0.166 666...1/6One sixth. Often appears in mathematical equations, such as in the sum of squares of the integers and in the solution to the Basel problem.

Irrational numbers

The irrational numbers are a set of numbers that includes all real numbers that are not rational numbers. The irrational numbers are categorised as algebraic numbers or transcendental numbers, which are not.

Algebraic numbers

NameExpressionDecimal expansionNotability
Golden ratio conjugate Reciprocal of the golden ratio.
Twelfth root of twoProportion between the frequencies of adjacent semitones in the 12 tone equal temperament scale.
Cube root of twoLength of the edge of a cube with volume two. See doubling the cube for the significance of this number.
Conway's constantDefined as the unique positive real root of a certain polynomial of degree 71.
Plastic numberThe unique real root of the cubic equation x = x + 1.
Square root of two = 2 sin 45° = 2 cos 45° Square root of two a.k.a. Pythagoras' constant. Ratio of diagonal to side length in a square. Proportion between the sides of paper sizes in the ISO 216 series.
Supergolden ratioThe only real solution of. Also the limit to the ratio between subsequent numbers in the binary Look-and-say sequence and the Narayana's cows sequence.
Triangular root of 2.
Golden ratio The larger of the two real roots of x = x + 1.
Square root of three = 2 sin 60° = 2 cos 30°. A.k.a. the measure of the fish. Length of the space diagonal of a cube with edge length 1. Altitude of an equilateral triangle with side length 2. Altitude of a regular hexagon with side length 1 and diagonal length 2.
Tribonacci constant.Appears in the volume and coordinates of the snub cube and some related polyhedra. It satisfies the equation x + x−3 = 2.
Square root of five.Length of the diagonal of a 1 × 2 rectangle.
Silver ratio + 1The larger of the two real roots of x = 2x + 1.
Altitude of a regular octagon with side length 1.
Square root of 6 · = area of a × rectangle. Length of the space diagonal of a 1 × 1 × 2 rectangular box.
Square root of 7
Square root of 82
Square root of 10 · . Length of the diagonal of a 1 × 3 rectangle.
Bronze ratio The larger of the two real roots of x = 3x + 1.
Square root of 11Length of the space diagonal of a 1 × 1 × 3 rectangular box.
Square root of 122. Length of the space diagonal of a cube with edge length 2.

Transcendental numbers

NameSymbol
or
Formula
Decimal expansionNotes and notability
Gelfond's constante...
Ramanujan's constante...
Gaussian integral...
Komornik–Loreti constantq...
Universal parabolic constantP2...
Gelfond–Schneider constant2...
Euler's numbere...
PiPi|...
Riemann zeta function at s=2...Also represented as ζ
Riemann zeta function at s=4...Also represented as ζ
Super square-root of 2Tetration#Square super-root|...
Liouville constantc...
Champernowne constantC10...
Reciprocal of pi...
Reciprocal of Euler's number...
Prouhet–Thue–Morse constant...
Base ten logarithm of Euler's numberlog10 e...
Omega constantΩ...
Cahen's constantc...
Natural logarithm of 2ln 2
Gauss's constantG...
Tau2: ...The ratio of the circumference to a radius, and the number of radians in a complete circle

Irrational but not known to be transcendental

Some numbers are known to be irrational numbers, but have not been proven to be transcendental. This differs from the algebraic numbers, which are known not to be transcendental.
NameDecimal expansionProof of irrationalityReference of unknown transcendentality
ζ, also known as Apéry's constant
Erdős–Borwein constant, E...
Copeland–Erdős constant...Can be proven with Dirichlet's theorem on arithmetic progressions or Bertrand's postulate or Ramare's theorem that every even integer is a sum of at most six primes. It also follows directly from its normality.
Prime constant, ρ...Proof of the number's irrationality is given at prime constant.
Reciprocal Fibonacci constant, ψ...

Real numbers

The real numbers are a superset containing the algebraic and the transcendental numbers. For some numbers, it is not known whether they are algebraic or transcendental. The following list includes real numbers that have not been proved to be irrational, nor transcendental.

Real but not known to be irrational, nor transcendental

Name and symbolDecimal expansionNotes
1st Feigenbaum constant, δ4.6692...Both Feigenbaum constants are believed to be transcendental, although they have not been proven to be so.
2nd Feigenbaum constant, α2.5029...Both Feigenbaum constants are believed to be transcendental, although they have not been proven to be so.
Barban's constant...
Backhouse's constant...
Fransén–Robinson constant, F...
Glaisher–Kinkelin constant, A...
Khinchin's constant, K0...It is not known whether this number is irrational.
Lévy's constant, γ...
Mills' constant, A...It is not known whether this number is irrational.
Murata's constant...
Ramanujan–Soldner constant, μ...
Sierpiński's constant, K...
Totient summatory constant...
Van der Pauw's constant, ...
Vardi's constant, E...
Favard constant, K1...
Somos' quadratic recurrence constant, σ...
Niven's constant, c...
Brun's constant, B2...The irrationality of this number would be a consequence of the truth of the infinitude of twin primes.
Landau's totient constant...
Brun's constant for prime quadruplets, B4...
Quadratic class number constant...
Catalan's constant, G...It is not known whether this number is irrational.
Viswanath's constant, σ...
Khinchin–Lévy constant...This number represents the probability that three random numbers have no common factor greater than 1.
Sarnak's constant...
Landau–Ramanujan constant...
C...
Z...
Heath-Brown–Moroz constant, C...
Kepler–Bouwkamp constant...
MRB constant...It is not known whether this number is irrational.
Meissel–Mertens constant, M...
Bernstein's constant, β...
Strongly carefree constant...
Gauss–Kuzmin–Wirsing constant, λ1...
Hafner–Sarnak–McCurley constant...
Artin's constant...
Carefree constant...
S...
F...
Stephens' constant...
Euler–Mascheroni constant, γ...It is not known whether this number is irrational.
Golomb–Dickman constant, λ...
Twin prime constant, C2...
Feller–Tornier constant...
Laplace limit, ε...
Taniguchi's constant...
Continued Fraction Constant, C...
Embree–Trefethen constant...

Numbers not known with high precision

Some real numbers, including transcendental numbers, are not known with high precision.
is a term for an element of a unital algebra over the field of real numbers.

Algebraic complex numbers

are numbers that are "infinite" in the sense that they are larger than all finite numbers, yet not necessarily absolutely infinite.
Physical quantities that appear in the universe are often described using physical constants.
Many languages have words expressing indefinite and fictitious numbers—inexact terms of indefinite size, used for comic effect, for exaggeration, as placeholder names, or when precision is unnecessary or undesirable. One technical term for such words is "non-numerical vague quantifier". Such words designed to indicate large quantities can be called "indefinite hyperbolic numerals".

Named numbers