create new account | forgot password


posted by unavailable on October 13th, 2010 at 1:58PM

unavailable
Link | Parent


 
 

posted by dennisn on October 13th, 2010 at 2:00PM

Oui. There are only something like 10^85 things in the entire universe. (No matter how small you cut it ... up to the smallest Planck Volume, obviously.) That's nothing compared to even a googol (10^100). And completely negligible compared to a googolplex (10^10^100).

posted by unavailable on October 13th, 2010 at 2:11PM

unavailable

posted by dennisn on October 13th, 2010 at 2:18PM

Graham's number, for one, "is an upper bound on the solution to a certain problem [1] in Ramsey theory." http://en.wikipedia.org/w...raham%27s_number

[1] Consider an n-dimensional hypercube, and connect each pair of vertices to obtain a complete graph on 2^n vertices. Then colour each of the edges of this graph either red or blue.
What is the smallest value of n for which every such colouring contains at least one single-coloured 4-vertex planar complete subgraph?


Googol(plex) aren't too useful, besides descriptively. (A googol is "astronomical", a googolplex is hyper-mega astronomical, etc.)

posted by unavailable on October 13th, 2010 at 6:07PM

unavailable

I have no idea what they're ta by dennisn on October 13th, 2010 at 6:19PM.