1023 (number)

1023 (one thousand [and] twenty-three) is the natural number following 1022 and preceding 1024.

1022 1023 1024
Cardinalone thousand twenty-three
Ordinal1023rd
(one thousand twenty-third)
Factorization3 × 11 × 31
Divisors1, 3, 11, 31, 33, 93, 341, 1023
Greek numeral,ΑΚΓ´
Roman numeralMXXIII
Binary11111111112
Ternary11012203
Senary44236
Octal17778
Duodecimal71312
Hexadecimal3FF16

In mathematics

1023 is the tenth Mersenne number of the form .[1]

In binary, it is also the tenth repdigit 11111111112 as all Mersenne numbers in decimal are repdigits in binary.

It is equal to the sum of five consecutive prime numbers 193 + 197 + 199 + 211 + 223.[2]

It is the number of three-dimensional polycubes with 7 cells.[3]

1023 is the number of elements in the 9-simplex, as well as the number of uniform polytopes in the tenth-dimensional hypercubic family , and the number of noncompact solutions in the family of paracompact honeycombs that shares symmetries with .

In other fields

Computing

Floating-point units in computers often run a IEEE 754 64-bit, floating-point excess-1023 format in 11-bit binary. In this format, also called binary64, the exponent of a floating-point number (e.g. 1.009001 E1031) appears as an unsigned binary integer from 0 to 2047, where subtracting 1023 from it gives the actual signed value.

1023 is the number of dimensions or length of messages of an error-correcting Reed-Muller code made of 64 block codes.[4]

Technology

The Global Positioning System (GPS) works on a ten-digit binary counter that runs for 1023 weeks, at which point an integer overflow causes its internal value to roll over to zero again.

1023 being , is the maximum number that a 10-bit ADC converter can return when measuring the highest voltage in range.

See also

References

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