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- combinatorics - Help me put these enormous numbers in order: googol . . .
Popular mathematics folklore provides some simple tools enabling us compactly to describe some truly enormous numbers For example, the number $10^{100}$ is commonly known as a googol, and a googol
- What is larger? Grahams number or Googolplexian?
3 See YouTube or wikipedia for the defination of Graham's number A Googol is defined as $10^ {100}$ A Googolplex is defined as $10^ {\text {Googol}}$ A Googolplexian is defined as $10^ {\text {Googolplex}}$ Intuitively, it seems to me that Graham's number is larger (maybe because of it's complex definition) Can anybody prove this?
- Which is bigger: a googolplex or $10^ {100!}$ [closed]
Therefore $10^ {100!}\gt10^\text {googol}=\text {googolplex}$ (Remark: The " $\times$ " symbol's role here is purely visual, to put a little extra separation between things that are treated differently
- Is Rayos number really that big? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
the smallest positive integer bigger than any finite positive integer named by an expression in the language of first order set theory with a googol symbols or less So while there are only approximately $ (10^ {100})^ { (10^ {100})}$ possible expressions, and only a very small fraction of them actually name a number, Rayo's number can be very
- Grahams number - Mathematics Stack Exchange
In order to understand how big Graham's number really is, I tried to come up with the largest number I could understand and then I tried to compare it with Graham's number Coming up with the numbe
- number theory - Comparing $\large 3^ {3^ {3^3}}$, googol, googolplex . . .
How to show that $\large 3^ {3^ {3^3}}$ is larger than a googol ($\large 10^ {100}$) but smaller than googoplex ($\large 10^ {10^ {100}}$) Thanks much in advance!!!
- tetration - What number tetrated by itself equals a googol . . .
What number tetrated by itself equals a googol? Ask Question Asked 11 years ago Modified 10 years, 11 months ago
- How to Calculate the Disk Space Required to Store Googolplex?
Given the googolplex number and that 1 gigabyte = 1 073 741 824 bytes How would I calculate the amount of disk space required to store the googolplex number?
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