"100 million" redirects here. For the song by Birdman, see
100 Million.
"Hundred million" redirects here. For the song by Treble Charger, see
Hundred Million.
A request that this article title be changed to 100,000,000-999,999,999 is
under discussion. Please do not move this article until the discussion is closed.
East Asian languages treat 100,000,000 as a counting unit, significant as the square of a
myriad, also a counting unit. In Chinese, Korean, and Japanese respectively it is yi (
simplified Chinese: 亿;
traditional Chinese: 億;
pinyin: yì) (or
Chinese: 萬萬;
pinyin: wànwàn in ancient texts), eok (억/億) and oku (億). These languages do not have single words for a thousand to the second, third, fifth powers, etc.
134,219,796 = number of 32-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 32-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 32[12]
136,048,896 = 116642 = 1084
139,854,276 = 118262, the smallest zeroless base 10 pandigital square
260,301,176 = number of 33-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 33-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 33[26]
505,294,128 = number of 34-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 34-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 34[34]
923,187,456 = 303842, the largest zeroless pandigital square
928,772,650 = number of 37-bead necklaces (turning over is allowed) where complements are equivalent[7]
929,275,200 = number of primitive polynomials of degree 35 over GF(2)[19]
942,060,249 = 306932, palindromic square
981,706,832 = number of 35-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 35-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 35[41]
987,654,321 = largest zeroless pandigital number
992,436,543 = 635
997,002,999 = 9993, the largest 9-digit cube
999,950,884 = 316222, the largest 9-digit square
999,961,560 = largest
triangular number with 9 digits and the 44,720th triangular number
"100 million" redirects here. For the song by Birdman, see
100 Million.
"Hundred million" redirects here. For the song by Treble Charger, see
Hundred Million.
A request that this article title be changed to 100,000,000-999,999,999 is
under discussion. Please do not move this article until the discussion is closed.
East Asian languages treat 100,000,000 as a counting unit, significant as the square of a
myriad, also a counting unit. In Chinese, Korean, and Japanese respectively it is yi (
simplified Chinese: 亿;
traditional Chinese: 億;
pinyin: yì) (or
Chinese: 萬萬;
pinyin: wànwàn in ancient texts), eok (억/億) and oku (億). These languages do not have single words for a thousand to the second, third, fifth powers, etc.
134,219,796 = number of 32-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 32-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 32[12]
136,048,896 = 116642 = 1084
139,854,276 = 118262, the smallest zeroless base 10 pandigital square
260,301,176 = number of 33-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 33-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 33[26]
505,294,128 = number of 34-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 34-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 34[34]
923,187,456 = 303842, the largest zeroless pandigital square
928,772,650 = number of 37-bead necklaces (turning over is allowed) where complements are equivalent[7]
929,275,200 = number of primitive polynomials of degree 35 over GF(2)[19]
942,060,249 = 306932, palindromic square
981,706,832 = number of 35-bead necklaces with 2 colors when turning over is not allowed; also number of output sequences from a simple 35-stage cycling shift register; also number of binary irreducible polynomials whose degree divides 35[41]
987,654,321 = largest zeroless pandigital number
992,436,543 = 635
997,002,999 = 9993, the largest 9-digit cube
999,950,884 = 316222, the largest 9-digit square
999,961,560 = largest
triangular number with 9 digits and the 44,720th triangular number