17 was described at MIT as "the least random number", according to the Jargon File.[1] This is supposedly because, in a study where respondents were asked to choose a random number from 1 to 20, 17 was the most common choice. This study has been repeated a number of times.[2]
Since seventeen is a Fermat prime, regular heptadecagons can be constructed with a compass and unmarked ruler. This was proven by Carl Friedrich Gauss and ultimately led him to choose mathematics over philology for his studies.[8][9]
The minimum possible number of givens for a sudoku puzzle with a unique solution is 17.[10][11]
Either 16 or 18 unit squares can be formed into rectangles with perimeter equal to the area; and there are no other natural numbers with this property. The Platonists regarded this as a sign of their peculiar propriety; and Plutarch notes it when writing that the Pythagoreans "utterly abominate" 17, which "bars them off from each other and disjoins them".[22]
17 is the least for the Theodorus Spiral to complete one revolution.[23] This, in the sense of Plato, who questioned why Theodorus (his tutor) stopped at when illustrating adjacent right triangles whose bases are units and heights are successive square roots, starting with . In part due to Theodorus’s work as outlined in Plato’s Theaetetus, it is believed that Theodorus had proved all the square roots of non-square integers from 3 to 17 are irrational by means of this spiral.
Enumeration of icosahedron stellations
In three-dimensional space, there are seventeen distinct fully supported stellations generated by an icosahedron.[24] The seventeenth prime number is 59, which is equal to the total number of stellations of the icosahedron by Miller's rules.[25][26] Without counting the icosahedron as a zeroth stellation, this total becomes 58, a count equal to the sum of the first seven prime numbers (2 + 3 + 5 + 7 ... + 17).[27] Seventeen distinct fully supported stellations are also produced by truncated cube and truncated octahedron.[24]
Four-dimensional zonotopes
Seventeen is also the number of four-dimensional parallelotopes that are zonotopes. Another 34, or twice 17, are Minkowski sums of zonotopes with the 24-cell, itself the simplest parallelotope that is not a zonotope.[28]
The number of suratal-Isra in the Qur'an is seventeen, at times included as one of seven Al-Musabbihat. 17 is the total number of Rak'as that Muslims perform during Salat on a daily basis.
Other fields
Seventeen is:
The total number of syllables in a haiku (5 + 7 + 5).
^John H. Conway and Richard K. Guy, The Book of Numbers. New York: Copernicus (1996): 11. "Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) showed that two regular "heptadecagons" (17-sided polygons) could be constructed with ruler and compasses."
^McGuire, Gary (2012). "There is no 16-clue sudoku: solving the sudoku minimum number of clues problem". arXiv:1201.0749 [cs.DS].
^McGuire, Gary; Tugemann, Bastian; Civario, Gilles (2014). "There is no 16-clue sudoku: Solving the sudoku minimum number of clues problem via hitting set enumeration". Experimental Mathematics. 23 (2): 190–217. doi:10.1080/10586458.2013.870056. S2CID8973439.
^Senechal, Marjorie; Galiulin, R. V. (1984). "An introduction to the theory of figures: the geometry of E. S. Fedorov". Structural Topology (in English and French) (10): 5–22. hdl:2099/1195. MR0768703.