@afiqaffandiofficial: THRF: FIRE DRAGON SCRAMBLE! #tomicahero #rescue #force #fire #rescueforce #rescuefire #tomicaherorescueforce #tomicaherorescuefire #fire1 #fire2 #fire3 #tokusatsu #tokusatsuseries #nostalgia #childhood #childhoodmemories #fyp #fypシ #fypage #fypシ゚viral #foryoupage #foryourpage

✨ ANDY_STUDIO 🎥 ✨
✨ ANDY_STUDIO 🎥 ✨
Open In TikTok:
Region: MY
Thursday 05 June 2025 08:18:12 GMT
118014
5139
0
148

Music

Download

Comments

There are no more comments for this video.
To see more videos from user @afiqaffandiofficial, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

tung tung Accelerationist ||  Graham's number (\(g_{64}\)) is one of the largest integers ever used in a serious mathematical proof. It is so massive that the observable universe cannot hold its digits, even if each digit were written down in the smallest possible physical space.1. Origin and PurposeMathematician Ronald Graham introduced this number in 1971. He used it as an upper bound for a problem in Ramsey theory, a branch of combinatorics. The problem asks for the minimum number of dimensions a hypercube must have to guarantee that certain colored line configurations exist among its corners.2. How Large Is It?Cannot be written: You cannot write down its full sequence of digits. The universe would run out of physical particles (atoms) before you finish.Brain collapse: Trying to memorize or hold every digit in your mind would cram too much information into your brain, causing it to collapse into a black hole.Known ending: Even though the full scale is unimaginable, mathematicians know the exact ending. Graham's number ends with the digit 7.3. Knuth's Up-Arrow NotationThis number requires Knuth's up-arrow notation to be written down. It represents extreme, repeated towers of exponents.One arrow (\(\uparrow \)) is regular exponentiation (\(3 \uparrow 3 = 3^3 = 27\)).Two arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\)) form a power tower (tetration). For example, \(3 \uparrow\uparrow 3\) is \(3^{3^{3}}\), which equals roughly 7.6 trillion.Three arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\)) stack that power tower recursively. It creates a tower of 3s that is 7.6 trillion layers tall.Graham's number takes this logic and repeats the process through 64 layers of iteration. #ongezellig #mymyongezellig #accelerationist #accelerationism #fyp
tung tung Accelerationist || Graham's number (\(g_{64}\)) is one of the largest integers ever used in a serious mathematical proof. It is so massive that the observable universe cannot hold its digits, even if each digit were written down in the smallest possible physical space.1. Origin and PurposeMathematician Ronald Graham introduced this number in 1971. He used it as an upper bound for a problem in Ramsey theory, a branch of combinatorics. The problem asks for the minimum number of dimensions a hypercube must have to guarantee that certain colored line configurations exist among its corners.2. How Large Is It?Cannot be written: You cannot write down its full sequence of digits. The universe would run out of physical particles (atoms) before you finish.Brain collapse: Trying to memorize or hold every digit in your mind would cram too much information into your brain, causing it to collapse into a black hole.Known ending: Even though the full scale is unimaginable, mathematicians know the exact ending. Graham's number ends with the digit 7.3. Knuth's Up-Arrow NotationThis number requires Knuth's up-arrow notation to be written down. It represents extreme, repeated towers of exponents.One arrow (\(\uparrow \)) is regular exponentiation (\(3 \uparrow 3 = 3^3 = 27\)).Two arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\)) form a power tower (tetration). For example, \(3 \uparrow\uparrow 3\) is \(3^{3^{3}}\), which equals roughly 7.6 trillion.Three arrows (\(\uparrow\uparrow\uparrow\)) stack that power tower recursively. It creates a tower of 3s that is 7.6 trillion layers tall.Graham's number takes this logic and repeats the process through 64 layers of iteration. #ongezellig #mymyongezellig #accelerationist #accelerationism #fyp

About