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  2. Googol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Googol

    A googol is the large number 10 100 or ten to the power of one ... digit 1 followed by one hundred zeros: ... of the £1 million question in a 2001 ...

  3. Names of large numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_large_numbers

    The googolplex is, then, a specific finite number, equal to 1 with a googol zeros after it. Value Name Authority ... 1,000,000 = 1 million; 1,000,000 2 = 1 billion; ...

  4. Large numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_numbers

    The factor is intended to make reading comprehension easier than a lengthy series of zeros. For example, 1.0 × 10 9 expresses one billion—1 followed by nine zeros. The reciprocal, one billionth, is 1.0 × 10 −9.

  5. Googolplex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Googolplex

    A typical book can be printed with 10 6 zeros (around 400 pages with 50 lines per page and 50 zeros per line). Therefore, it requires 10 94 such books to print all the zeros of a googolplex (that is, printing a googol zeros). [4] If each book had a mass of 100 grams, all of them would have a total mass of 10 93 kilograms.

  6. Graham's number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham's_number

    In other words, G is calculated in 64 steps: the first step is to calculate g 1 with four up-arrows between 3s; the second step is to calculate g 2 with g 1 up-arrows between 3s; the third step is to calculate g 3 with g 2 up-arrows between 3s; and so on, until finally calculating G = g 64 with g 63 up-arrows between 3s.

  7. Orders of magnitude (numbers) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_of_magnitude_(numbers)

    1/52! chance of a specific shuffle Mathematics: The chances of shuffling a standard 52-card deck in any specific order is around 1.24 × 10 −68 (or exactly 1 ⁄ 52!) [4] Computing: The number 1.4 × 10 −45 is approximately equal to the smallest positive non-zero value that can be represented by a single-precision IEEE floating-point value.

  8. Long and short scales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_and_short_scales

    Combinations of the unambiguous words such as ten, hundred, thousand and million. For example: one thousand million and one million million. [5] Scientific notation (for example 1 × 10 10), or its engineering notation variant (for example 10 × 10 9), or the computing variant E notation (for example 1e10). This is the most common practice ...

  9. Talk:Googolplex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Googolplex

    The only way it could be possible (hihi), is in the far far future, when the Universe has expanded so much and the matter in it has expanded so much that a number with a googol number of zeros and one one (!) can be spread enough across 10^80 planets as big as our Earth (for each atom in our current Universe, we need a whole planet to store ...