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In mathematics, a sphenic number (Old Greek sphen = wedge) is a positive integer which is the product of three distinct prime numbers. Note that this definition is more stringent than simply requiring the integer to have exactly three prime factors; e.g. 60 = 22 × 3 × 5 has exactly 3 prime factors, but is not sphenic. All sphenic numbers have exactly eight divisors. If we express the sphenic number as All sphenic numbers are by definition squarefree, because the prime factors must be distinct. The Möbius function of any sphenic number is −1. The first few sphenic numbers are: 30, 42, 66, 70, 78, 102, 105, 110, 114, 130, 138, 154, 165, ... (sequence A007304 in OEIS) The first case of two consecutive integers which are sphenic numbers is 230 = 2×5×23 and 231 = 3×7×11. The first case of three is 1309 = 7×11×17, 1310 = 2×5×131, and 1311 = 3×19×23. There is no case of more than three, because one of every four consecutive integers is divisible by 4 = 2×2 and therefore not squarefree. As of September 2008[ref] the largest known sphenic number is (243,112,609 − 1) × (237,156,667 − 1) × (232,582,657 − 1), i.e., the product of the three largest known primes. External links
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