@a5dimensao: Tem coisas que acontecem tão rápido que nossos olhos simplesmente não conseguem acompanhar! 👀⚡ É aí que a tecnologia entra em cena. Com imagens em câmera lenta, conseguimos enxergar detalhes impressionantes que passariam despercebidos em tempo real. Neste experimento, uma bola é lançada contra uma hélice girando em alta velocidade, e o resultado revela cada impacto, deformação e reação do material de uma forma simplesmente fascinante! É incrível perceber como um acontecimento de poucos milésimos de segundo pode esconder tantos detalhes que normalmente nunca veríamos. 🤯 Agora eu quero saber: qual objeto você gostaria de ver em câmera lenta se chocando com outro objeto? E por quê? Conta pra gente nos comentários! 👇 #aquintadimensao #brunobraz #cameralenta #slowmotion #bola #boladebasquete #boladefutebol #impacto #reacao #experimento #curiosidades #tecnologia #ciencia #fisica #colisao #engenharia #detalhes #inovacao #videocurioso #satisfatorio #incrivel #descobertas #viralizando #entretenimento #observacao

A Quinta Dimensão
A Quinta Dimensão
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Wednesday 17 June 2026 10:03:57 GMT
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T.C.C#fyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy #fyp #fyyp #-10#fyyyp Graham’s number is an extremely large upper bound in Ramsey theory, named after mathematician Ronald Graham. It gained fame as the largest number ever used in a serious mathematical proof, holding the Guinness World Record for this distinction.   Definition and Construction   Hypercube problem: The problem asks for the smallest dimension n of a hypercube such that any two‑color edge coloring contains a monochromatic complete subgraph of four coplanar vertices.   Graham's bound: Graham showed that a solution exists and provided a bound now called Graham’s number.1   Arrow notation: The number is defined via a recursive sequence using Knuth’s up‑arrow notation: g₁ = 3↑↑↑↑3, g₂ = 3↑g₁3, and so on up to g₆₄, which is Graham’s number.1   Towering growth: Each stage applies many more arrows, causing the value to grow tower‑like.1   Scale and Significance   Universe too small: Graham’s number far exceeds everyday large numbers such as a googolplex; its decimal digits cannot be written in the observable universe, as each digit would require at least a Planck volume.1   Last digits known: Although the whole decimal expansion is unattainable, modular arithmetic gives its last few digits.1   Historical impact: The number gained popularity after Martin Gardner’s 1977 Scientific American column and was listed in the 1980 Guinness Book of World Records as the largest number used in a serious proof, illustrating the power of recursive notation in combinatorics.
T.C.C#fyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy #fyp #fyyp #-10#fyyyp Graham’s number is an extremely large upper bound in Ramsey theory, named after mathematician Ronald Graham. It gained fame as the largest number ever used in a serious mathematical proof, holding the Guinness World Record for this distinction. Definition and Construction Hypercube problem: The problem asks for the smallest dimension n of a hypercube such that any two‑color edge coloring contains a monochromatic complete subgraph of four coplanar vertices. Graham's bound: Graham showed that a solution exists and provided a bound now called Graham’s number.1 Arrow notation: The number is defined via a recursive sequence using Knuth’s up‑arrow notation: g₁ = 3↑↑↑↑3, g₂ = 3↑g₁3, and so on up to g₆₄, which is Graham’s number.1 Towering growth: Each stage applies many more arrows, causing the value to grow tower‑like.1 Scale and Significance Universe too small: Graham’s number far exceeds everyday large numbers such as a googolplex; its decimal digits cannot be written in the observable universe, as each digit would require at least a Planck volume.1 Last digits known: Although the whole decimal expansion is unattainable, modular arithmetic gives its last few digits.1 Historical impact: The number gained popularity after Martin Gardner’s 1977 Scientific American column and was listed in the 1980 Guinness Book of World Records as the largest number used in a serious proof, illustrating the power of recursive notation in combinatorics.

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