What is the Biggest Number We Know of?

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Publicado 2017-01-08
Have you ever wondered what is the biggest number we can think of? Is it a Googol? Or a Googolplex? How about Graham's number? Watch this video as I explain some of the biggest numbers known to us which are mind-blowingly huge and are impossible to perceive.

All Credits and Creative Commons Attributions at the end of the video.

Rayo's Interview: mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/04/ch...

Music Credits:

Vespers - Topher Mohr and Alex Elena

#largestnumber #biggestnumber #numbers #googol

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @kfcmurphyy8950
    I remember in pre school if u could count to one hundred you were classified “The G.O.A.T”
  • @Clickty
    you know its a big number when you see Letters.
  • @n7c
    Thank you. Now I have something to talk about on a date.
  • @pleasuretokill
    Fun fact about how small a plank length is: You, as a person are closer to being as big as the entire universe than you are close to being as small as a plank length.
  • @Slinx92OLD
    Reality: Googol Subtitles: G O O G L E
  • @dee347
    you remember when 10 was a giant number? childhood...
  • @nikhilgupta5117
    However bigger a Number may be it will always be closer to zero than to infinity...🙂
  • @sucheend0280
    The biggest number we know of is : two number nines, a number 9 large, one six with extra dip, a number seven, two number forty fives, One with cheese And A Large Soda.
  • @Judeinator9001
    “These numbers are insanely big, but they are still very small.” I love how that sentence makes zero sense out of context.
  • @3dwaffle553
    My teacher: what is infinity Me: shows this video
  • @ghosmic1
    If you were the size of a planck’s length, an atom would be the size of the observable universe
  • @trump2017
    But my aunt's ego is larger than all of this.
  • @lokkedpiano5261
    Someone in the comments asked if we could reach Rayo's number with the universe being filled with Planck volumes times the Planck times since the beginning. I wanted to share my detailed response. Below is what I did: I clarified his ruleset. The actual universe could be infinite, but the largest finite number that it has been estimated to be is ~6 sextillion times bigger than the observable universe. I made a calculation for this generous amount. Calculation: (4.65 x 10^185) x (6x10^18) x (5.39 x 10^44) x (11.13) x (60) x (24) x (365) x (1.38 x 10^10) = 1.21 x 10^266 Meaning: (Plank volumes in Observable Universe) x (6 sextillion) x (Number of Planck times in 5.39 seconds) x (Multiple needed to convert the number of Planck times in 5.39 seconds to the number of Planck times in one minute) x (minutes in one hour) x (hours in a day) x (days in a year) x (Age of the universe in years, 13.8 billion) = 1.21 x 10^266 (121 Septemoctogintillion) In computation, you definitely do not reach Rayo's number nor even G1 in Graham's sequence (3 quadruple-arrow 3). The total (1.21 x 10^266) is a small fraction to 3 triple-arrow 3 (3^7.25trillion 3s stacked).
  • @xanthoconite4904
    "Rayo's number is the biggest number we know of" Nowadays we have numbers that make Rayos Number look like a 0 by comparison, such numbers include: "Fish Number 7", and "Large Number Garden Number"