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@arquivo..robson..charles: Desigrejados #pastor #pregação #barba
Arquivo Robson Charles
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Region: BR
Wednesday 24 June 2026 15:52:38 GMT
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luizmonteiro :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-24 16:50:31
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EP :
😁😁😁
2026-06-24 19:26:03
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Graham's number is a gigantic number that serves as an upper bound for a specific problem in Ramsey theory. It is a certain very large power of three, expressed using Knuth's up-arrow notation. It is named after Ronald Graham. The number became known to the general public after Martin Gardner described it in his "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American in November 1977, where he wrote: "In an unpublished proof, Graham has recently established a bound so vast that it holds the record for the largest number ever used in a serious mathematical proof." In 1980, the Guinness Book of World Records repeated Gardner’s claims, further fueling public interest in the number. Graham's number is unimaginably larger than other well-known large numbers, such as the googol, googolplex, and even larger than Skewes' number and Moser's number. The entire observable universe is too small to contain the ordinary decimal representation of Graham's number (assuming each digit occupies at least a Planck volume). Even power towers of the form a^{b^{c^{\cdot^{\cdot^{\cdot}}}}} are useless for this purpose (in the same sense), although the number can be expressed using recursive formulas such as Knuth's up-arrow notation or equivalents, which is what Graham did. The last 500 digits of Graham's number are: In modern mathematical proofs, numbers far larger than Graham's number sometimes appear, for example in Harvey Friedman's finite form of Kruskal's theorem — the so-called TREE(3).
Credit to my girl @✨kameron for the headphone hook up 😭😭
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