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(Redirected from Pentatopic number)
Number in the 5th cell of any row of Pascal's triangle
In number theory, a pentatope number is a number in the fifth cell of any row of Pascal's triangle starting with the 5-term row 1 4 6 4 1, either from left to right or from right to left. It is named because it represents the number of 3-dimensional unit spheres which can be packed into a pentatope (a 4-dimensional tetrahedron) of increasing side lengths.
which is the number of distinct quadruples that can be selected from n + 3 objects, and it is read aloud as "n plus three choose four".
Properties
Two of every three pentatope numbers are also pentagonal numbers. To be precise, the (3k − 2)th pentatope number is always the th pentagonal number and the (3k − 1)th pentatope number is always the th pentagonal number. The (3k)th pentatope number is the generalized pentagonal number obtained by taking the negative index in the formula for pentagonal numbers. (These expressions always give integers).
Pentatope numbers can be represented as the sum of the first n tetrahedral numbers:
and are also related to tetrahedral numbers themselves:
No prime number is the predecessor of a pentatope number (it needs to check only -1 and 4 = 2), and the largest semiprime which is the predecessor of a pentatope number is 1819.
In biochemistry, the pentatope numbers represent the number of possible arrangements of n different polypeptide subunits in a tetrameric (tetrahedral) protein.
References
Deza, Elena; Deza, M. (2012), "3.1 Pentatope numbers and their multidimensional analogues", Figurate Numbers, World Scientific, p. 162, ISBN9789814355483