1 with a hundred zeroes is called Googol, 10[sup]100[/sup]. It's fairly big and has a silly name.JinxyKatte said:Does anyone know off the top of their heads what
10 to the power of 1(insert 100 0's here) is
The resulting number is so large you could not actually write it down in full over the length of the universe. Apparently.
It is messed up, my friend and I had an interesting conversation... until we realised we were working with 2 different numbersChocoFace said:12 zeroes for a billion? that's messed up.
1000 x million is the right way, of course.
This is true.........and It's ANNOYING.maninahat said:You think that's crazy? Go to China or India, and you'll find they do big numbers in groups of four, producing numbesr that look like this: 1,00,00,000 etc, as opposed to 10,000,000). Look up the Indian "Crore".
No, you mean 10[sup]10[sup]100[/sup][/sup]. 10[sup]100[/sup] can be written down easily:JinxyKatte said:Does anyone know off the top of their heads what
10 to the power of 1(insert 100 0's here) is
The resulting number is so large you could not actually write it down in full over the length of the universe. Apparently.
Hawgh said:1.000.000 = million.
1.000.000.000.000 = billion (milliard).
1.000.000.000.000.000.000 = trillion.
1.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000 = quadrillion.
You mean a billion billion? Not if you are english. The Trillion has 18 zeros.brandon237 said:It is messed up, my friend and I had an interesting conversation... until we realised we were working with 2 different numbersChocoFace said:12 zeroes for a billion? that's messed up.
1000 x million is the right way, of course.![]()
And isn't 12 zeros a trillion?
Oh, right. Sorry, my mistake. I didn't read what you'd written carefully enough.JinxyKatte said:No what I asked for was what isRedingold said:No, you mean 10[sup]10[sup]100[/sup][/sup]. 10[sup]100[/sup] can be written down easily:JinxyKatte said:Does anyone know off the top of their heads what
10 to the power of 1(insert 100 0's here) is
The resulting number is so large you could not actually write it down in full over the length of the universe. Apparently.
10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
The number you were thinking of was a 1 followed by that many zeroes, which is called a googolplex.
That's not a particularly large number, either, though. 9[sup]9[sup]9[sup]9[/sup][/sup][/sup] is bigger than that.
The biggest named finite number is Graham's number, which is so large it can't actually be written down in the form of a tower of powers.
http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/susan/cyc/g/graham.htm
Anyhoo, enough of that. In the old British system, one billion was indeed 10[sup]12[/sup], and 10[sup]9[/sup] was called a milliard. Now, however, British people use 10[sup]9[/sup] as a billion (at least, everyone I know does).
10 to the power of 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Which is a googolplex. I definitely said it right.