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602000

602000 is a six-digit decimal integer. In mathematics it is an even composite number. Its prime factorization is 602000 = 2^4 × 5^3 × 7 × 43. It is divisible by 1000, since it ends with three zeros, and can be written as 2000 × 301. Consequently, the number is divisible by 16 and by 125 as well. The total number of positive divisors is (4+1)(3+1)(1+1)(1+1) = 80.

In practical use, 602000 may appear as a numeric identifier in various coding schemes. It can function

Because it is a plain integer, 602000 can also be encountered in programming and data contexts as

as
a
postal
code,
catalog
number,
or
database
key,
depending
on
the
system
that
assigns
the
code.
Six-digit
codes
are
common
in
many
countries
for
geographic
regions,
administrative
districts,
or
service
identifiers,
but
a
given
six-digit
sequence
such
as
602000
has
no
inherent
meaning
outside
its
specific
context.
a
literal
value
or
as
part
of
calculations
involving
multipliers
of
powers
of
ten
(for
example,
602000
=
602
×
1000
or
2000
×
301).
Its
properties
as
a
multiple
of
1000
and
as
a
product
of
relatively
small
primes
make
it
convenient
in
certain
arithmetic
or
encoding
tasks,
though
these
characteristics
do
not
imply
any
universal
significance
beyond
the
number
itself.