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  1. A googolplex is a 1 followed by a googol of zeros. It’s impossible to write out, but in scientific notation it looks like 1 x 10 10^100. These two numbers are too large to have any practical value (they are far, far larger than the number of grains of sand or drops of water on earth, or even the number of atoms in the universe), but Kasner ...

  2. number of zeros American name British name 10 9: 9 billion thousand million or milliard 10 12: 12 trillion billion ... googolplex googolplex

  3. Googolplex is a large number equal to 10^(10^(100)) (i.e., 1 with a googol number of 0s written after it). The term was coined in 1938 after 9-year-old Milton Sirotta, nephew of Edward Kasner, coined the term "googol" and Kasner extended it to this larger number (Kasner 1989, pp. 20-27; Bialik 2004).

  4. Googolplex is a large number equal to 10 10 100 or 10 Googol . In other terms, the digit 1 with a googol (10 100 ) number of zeros following it.

  5. May 13, 2013 · From this, the total number of different combinations in which these particles could be arranged would equal approximately one googolplex. Ginormous numbers For its time, googol was the largest ...

  6. A googol is 10 to the 100th power, which is 1 followed by 100 zeros. While this is an unimaginably large number, there's still an infinite quantity of larger numbers. One such number is googolplex, which is 10 to the power of a googol, or 1 followed by a googol of zeros. The word googol was introduced in Mathematics and the Imagination, a book ...

  7. Mar 22, 2013 · A googolplex is 10 10 100; that is, 10 raised to the googol-th power. This can also be viewed as a one followed by a googol of zeros at its right. A googoplex is much larger than a googol. In fact, since a googolplex has a googol number of zeros in its decimal representation, a googoplex has more digits than there are atoms in our universe.

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