57 (number)
57 (fifty-seven) is the natural number following 56 and preceding 58.
In mathematics
Fifty-seven is the sixteenth discrete semiprime and the sixth in the (3.q) family. With 58 it forms the fourth discrete bi-prime pair. 57 has an aliquot sum of 23 and is the first composite member of the 23-aliquot tree. Although 57 is not prime, it is jokingly known as the "Grothendieck prime" after a story in which Grothendieck supposedly gave it as an example of a particular prime number.[1]
As a semiprime, 57 is a Blum integer since its two prime factors are both Gaussian primes.
57 is a 20-gonal number. It is a Leyland number since 25 + 52 = 57.
57 is a repdigit in base 7 (111).
See also 57-cell.
In science
Astronomy
In music
In fiction and media
- B'hrian Bloodaxe, the first Low King of the dwarfs, killed fifty-seven trolls in the legendary Battle of Koom Valley on Discworld (a fictional world created by author Terry Pratchett)
- Summer of Fifty Seven by Stephen C. Joseph
- There are 57 movie references in the movie 'Scream'.
- Passenger 57, a film starring Wesley Snipes
- Agent 57 is the name of the master of disguise in the television series Dangermouse.
- The 57th Overlanders is a fictional brigade mentioned in the television series Firefly.
- Exit 57, a sketch comedy show that aired on Comedy Central from 1995-96. Featured Stephen Colbert, Paul Dinello, Jodi Lennon, Mitch Rouse and Amy Sedaris.
- C-57D is the designation of the spaceship featured in the movie Forbidden Planet, and is referenced in the movie Serenity as well.
- West 57 was a weekly news-magazine show on CBS, 1985–89, hosted by Meredith Vieira.
- In the first storyboard draft for Pixar's film Cars, the main character, a race car named Lightning McQueen was going to have number 57 as his racing number, in reference to director John Lasseter's birthdate, January 12, 1957. But in the final cut, Lightning's racing number changed to 95.
- Studio 57 was a dramatic anthology series in 1954, starring Brian Keith and Carolyn Jones.
- The Fabulous 57 were disk jockeys on WMCA 570 Radio, New York during the 1960s.
- Marvel Comics' character Vision debuts in issue #57 of The Avengers.
- The climax of the movie Eraser occurs on Pier 57.
- The Robot Chicken sketch "Pluto Nash Day" notes that 57 people at 20th Century Fox Studios died amid rioting and suicide.
- A Robot Chicken parody of the NBC TV series Heroes uses the episode title "Chapter Fifty-seven: Uncle Glen."
- The Cartoon Network program Metalocalypse has a fictional television station WHYK-57.
In other fields
Fifty-seven is:
Historical years
AD 57, 57 BC, 1957, 2057, etc.
References
- ^ This story is repeated in Part 2 of the AMS Notices biographical article on Grothendieck (Notices, Vol. 51, No. 10, November 2004; the article is available here).
- ^ The NGC / IC Project - Home of the Historically Corrected New General Catalogue (HCNGC) since 1993
- ^ NASA - Catalog of Solar Eclipse Saros 57
- ^ NASA - Lunar Eclipses of Saros Series 1 to 175
- ^ "After 40 years, Heinz revamps ketchup packets", AP, Feb. 4, 2010