The classical Greeks used letters of the Greek alphabet to represent Greek numerals: they used a capital letter mu (Μ) to represent ten thousand.[citation needed] This Greek root was used in early versions of the metric system in the form of the decimal prefix myria-.[3]
Depending on the country, the number ten thousand is usually written as 10,000 (including in the UK and US), 10.000, or 10 000.[4]
Land of 10000 Trails or 10000trails.com is an organization created in 1999 by the TN/KY Lakes Area Coalition and based in West Tennessee and West Kentucky to promote tourism by developing trails in the region.[13]
In acoustics, 10,000 hertz, 10 kilohertz, or 10 kHz of a sound signal at sea level has a wavelength of about 34 mm.
In music, a 10 kilohertz sound is a E♭9 in the A440 pitch standard, a bit more than an octave higher in pitch than the highest note on a standard piano.
radius of a circle with area 100 π km2 ≈ 314.159 km2.
In finance, on March 29, 1999, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 10006.78, which was the first time the index closed above the 10,000 mark.
In futurology, Stewart Brand in Visions of the Future: The 10,000-Year Library proposes a museum built around a 10,000-year clock as an idea for assuring that vital information survives future crashes of civilizations.[20]
In games,
Ten Thousand is one name of a dice game called farkle.
The Persian Immortals were also called the Ten Thousand or 10,000 Immortals, so named because their Number of 10,000 was immediately re-established after every loss.
The 10,000 Day War: Vietnam by Michael MaclearISBN 0-312-79094-5 also alternate titles The ten thousand day war: Vietnam, 1945–1975 (10,000 days is 27.4 years).
Tomb of Ten Thousand Soldiers – defeat of the Tang dynasty army of China in the Nanzhao kingdom in 751.
In Islamic history, 10,000 is the Number of besieging forces led by Muhammad's adversary, Abu Sufyan, during the Battle of the Trench.
the Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese phrase live for ten thousand years was used to bless emperors in East Asia.
Μύριοι is an Ancient Greek name for 10.000 taken into the modern European languages as 'myriad' (see above). Hebrew, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean have words with the same meaning.
In literature,
Man'yōshū (万葉集Man'yōshū, Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves) is the oldest existing, and most highly revered, collection of Japanese poetry.
Ten Thousand a Year 1883?. A drama in three acts. Adapted from the celebrated novel of the same name, by the author of the Diary of a Physician, and arranged for the stage by Richard Brinsley Peake.[22]
Anabasis, by the Greek writer Xenophon (431–360 B.C.), about the Army of the Ten Thousand – Greek mercenaries taking part in the expedition of Cyrus the Younger, a Persian prince, against his brother, King Artaxerxes II.
In philosophy, Lao Zi writes about ten thousand things in the Tao Te Ching. In Taoism, the "10,000 Things" is a term meaning all of phenomenal reality.[23]
In piphilology, ten thousand is the current world record for the Number of digits of pi memorized by a human being.
In psychology, Ten Thousand Dreams Interpreted, or what's in a dream: a scientific and practical, by Miller, Gustavus Hindman (1857–1929). Project Gutenberg.[24]
Revelation 5:11 And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round about the throne and the beasts and the elders: and the number of them was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands.[26]
The Year 10,000 problem is the collective name for all potential software bugs that will emerge as the need to express years with five digits arises.
In sports,
In athletics, 10,000 meters, 10 kilometers, 10 km, or 10K (6.2 miles) is the final standard track event in a long-distance track event and a distance in other racing events such as running, cycling, and skiing.
In bicycle racing, annual Tour of 10,000 Lakes Stage Race in Minneapolis.[29]
In baseball, on July 15, 2007, the Philadelphia Phillies became the first team in professional sports history to lose 10,000 games.
Selected numbers in the range 10001-19999edit
10001 to 10999edit
10007 = smallest five-digit prime number, twin prime with 10009.
10008 = palindromic in bases 5 (3100135), 22 (KEK22), 28 (CLC28) and 33 (96933) and a Harshad number in bases 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 13, 14 and 16.
10958 = the smallest positive integer that cannot be represented by an equation using increasing order of integers from 1 to 9 and basic arithmetic operations.[49]
12542 = there is a match puzzle called MOST + MOST = TOKYO, where each letter represents a digit. When one solves the puzzle, TOKYO = 12542, as 6271 + 6271 = 12542 [62]
12758 = most significant Number that cannot be expressed as the sum of distinct cubes.
12765 = Finnish internet meme; the code accompanying no-prize caps in a Coca-Cola bottle top prize contest. Often spelled out yksi – kaksi – seitsemän – kuusi – viisi, ei voittoa, "one – two – seven – six – five, no prize".
15640 = initial number of only four-, five-, or six-digit century to contain two prime quadruples[69] (in between which lies a record prime gap of 43[70]).
15661 = Friedman prime.
15667 = second nice Friedman prime.
15679 = Friedman prime.
15793 – Number of parallelogram polyominoes with 13 cells.[71]
19683 = 273, 39. Furthermore, there is a math puzzle regarding the word logic, such that LOGIC = (L+O+G+I+C)3. The solution to this is (1+9+6+8+3) (1+9+6+8+3) (1+9+6+8+3), which is (27)(27)(27), which equals to 19683. This is one of two digits for which this works, although the other solution has O and I are the same digit: 17576, as (1+7+5+7+6) (1+7+5+7+6) (1+7+5+7+6) = (26)(26)(26) = 17576.[84]
There are 1033 prime numbers between 10000 and 20000, a count that is itself prime. It is 196 prime numbers less than the number of primes between 0 and 10000 (1229, also prime).
^"Ten Thousand Islands NWR". U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Archived from the original on 2005-03-01. Retrieved 2005-02-14.
^Brewster, David (1830). The Edinburgh Encyclopædia. Vol. 12. Edinburgh, UK: William Blackwood, John Waugh, John Murray, Baldwin & Cradock, J. M. Richardson. p. 494. Retrieved 2015-10-09.
^Brewster, David (1832). The Edinburgh Encyclopaedia. Vol. 12 (1st American ed.). Joseph and Edward Parker. Retrieved 2015-10-09.
^Dingler, Johann Gottfried (1823). Polytechnisches Journal (in German). Vol. 11. Stuttgart, Germany: J.W. Gotta'schen Buchhandlung. Retrieved 2015-10-09.
^"Iraq Dinar Currency Photos| Banknote Series | 25000, 10000, 5000, 1000, 250, 50 Dinars". iraqi-dinar.com. Archived from the original on 2005-02-07. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
^http://www.iraqsales.com/10%2C000.htm Archived 2005-02-06 at the Wayback Machine
^Brand, Stewart. "The 10,000-Year Library". kurzweilai.net. Archived from the original on 2005-02-05. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
^"Army of 10,000". mississippiscv.org. Archived from the original on 2002-04-01. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
^"University of Michigan Digital Library - Login Options".
^"Tao Te Ching, Verse 34". thebigview.com. Archived from the original on 2007-08-17. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
^https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/926 : Ten Thousand Dreams Interpreted
^Taneja, Inder (2013). "Crazy Sequential Representation: Numbers from 0 to 11111 in terms of Increasing and Decreasing Orders of 1 to 9". arXiv:1302.1479 [math.HO].
^Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A000013 (Definition (1): Number of n-bead binary necklaces with beads of 2 colors where the colors may be swapped but turning over is not allowed)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.