153 (number)
153 is the natural number following 152 and preceding 154.
Mathematical properties
The number 153 is associated with the geometric shape known as the Vesica Piscis or Mandorla. Archimedes, in his Measurement of a Circle, referred to this ratio, as constituting the "measure of the fish", this ratio being an imperfect representation of 1/.As a triangular number, 153 is the sum of the first 17 integers, and is also the sum of the first five positive factorials:.
The number 153 is also a hexagonal number, and a truncated triangle number, meaning that 1, 15, and 153 are all triangle numbers.
The distinct prime factors of 153 add up to 20, and so do the ones of 154, hence the two form a Ruth-Aaron pair.
Since, it is a 3-narcissistic number, and it is also the smallest three-digit number which can be expressed as the sum of cubes of its digits. Only five other numbers can be expressed as the sum of the cubes of their digits: 0, 1, 370, 371 and 407. It is also a Friedman number, since 153 = 3 × 51, and a Harshad number in base 10, being divisible by the sum of its own digits.
The Biggs–Smith graph is a symmetric graph with 153 edges, all equivalent.
Another feature of the number 153 is that it is the limit of the following algorithm:
- Take a random positive integer, divisible by three
- Split that number into its base 10 digits
- Take the sum of their cubes
- Go back to the second step
In the Bible
The Gospel of John includes the narrative of the miraculous catch of 153 fish as the third appearance of Jesus after his resurrection.The precision of the number of fish in this narrative has long been considered peculiar, and many scholars, throughout history, have argued that 153 has some deeper significance. Jerome, for example, wrote that Oppian's Halieutica listed 153 species of fish, although this could not have been the intended meaning of the Gospel writer because Oppian composed Halieutica after the Gospel text was written, and at any rate never gave a list of fish species that clearly adds up to 153.
Augustine of Hippo argued that the significance lay in the fact that 153 is the sum of the first 17 integers, with 17 representing the combination of divine grace and law. Theologian D. A. Carson discusses this and other interpretations and concludes that "if the Evangelist has some symbolism in mind connected with the number 153, he has hidden it well", while other scholars note that "no symbolic significance for the number of 153 fish in John 21:11 has received widespread support."
Writers claiming a major role for Mary Magdalene have noted that in Greek isopsephy her epithet "η Μαγδαληνή" bears the number 8 + 40 + 1 + 3 + 4 + 1 + 30 + 8 + 50 + 8 = 153, thus, it is suggested, revealing her importance. Similarly, the phrase "τὸ δίκτυον" used in the passage bears the number 1224 = 8 × 153, as do some other phrases. The significance of this is unclear, given that Koine Greek provides a choice of several noun endings with different isopsephy values. The number 153 has also been related to the vesica piscis, with the claim that Archimedes used 153 as a "shorthand or abbreviation" for the square root of 3 in his On the Measurement of the Circle. However, examination of that work shows this to be only partly correct.
Evagrius Ponticus referred to the catch of 153 fish, as well as to the mathematical properties of the number when describing his 153-chapter work on prayer. Louis de Montfort, in his fifth method of saying the Rosary, connects the catch of 153 fish with the number of Hail Marys said, while St Paul's School in London was founded in 1512 by John Colet to teach 153 poor men's children, also in reference to the catch.
In the military
- is an of the Royal Australian Navy
- was a of the Royal Australian Navy during World War II
- JDS Yūgiri is an of the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force
- was a United States Navy auxiliary ship during the Vietnam War
- was a United States Navy Trefoil-class concrete barge during World War II
- was a United States Navy during World War II
- was a United States Navy during World War II
- was a United States Navy naval fighting ship during World War II
- was a United States Navy General G. O. Squier-class transport ship during World War II
- was a United States Navy during World War II
- was a United States Navy during World War II
- was a United States Navy S-class submarine during World War II
- The 153d Airlift Wing is a unit of the United States Air Force, located at Cheyenne Regional Airport, Cheyenne, Wyoming.
- The 153d Air Refueling Squadron is a unit of the Mississippi Air National Guard, flying the KC-135 Stratotanker
- The 153rd Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War
- The Russian Soviet Polikarpov I-153 Chaika was a late 1930s biplane fighter which saw combat during World War II
In transportation
- British Rail Class 153 is a single-car diesel multiple unit train
- Caledonian Airways Flight 153 from Douala International Airport, Douala, Cameroon crashed on March 4, 1962
- The Peugeot Type 153 car, produced between 1913 and 1925
- 153rd Street station on Metra's SouthWest Service in Orland Park, Illinois
In sports
- Australian rules footballer Scott Hodges had a SANFL season goal kicking record of 153 in 1990
In radio and TV
- The frequency of the longwave transmitters Donebach, Ingøy, Braşov, and Kenadsa is 153 kHz
In other fields
- The year AD 153 or 153 BC
- The year 153 AH in the Islamic calendar that corresponds to 769 – 770 CE
- The code for malignant neoplasm of the colon in the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems
- The code for "mental processes & intelligence" in the Dewey Decimal Classification
- A reference to a comet discovered in 2002
- A reference to a large asteroid with a dark surface in the outer Main belt
- The ordinal number of the coat of arms of Komi Republic in the State Heraldic Register of the Russian Federation
- The number of combined Arabic and Persian Hidden Words in the Bahá'í Faith.
- The atomic number of an element temporarily called
- A sonnet by William Shakespeare
- The U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics' world area code for Nicaragua
- The number of aphorisms outlined by Chr. Pack in 153 Chymical Aphorisms