@darknvss_x1: My Australian Friends Dancing | IB:@Markessexfan | Graham’s number is an extremely large number that was created by mathematician Ronald Graham while working on a problem in an area of mathematics called Ramsey theory. It is so large that it cannot be written in ordinary decimal form because there is not enough space in the observable universe to write all of its digits. The number is defined using a special notation called Knuth’s up-arrow notation, which allows repeated exponentiation to be expressed compactly. Graham’s number is built through a sequence of 64 increasingly enormous numbers, where each step uses the previous number to determine the number of up-arrows in the next step. The final value in this sequence is Graham’s number. Although unimaginably huge, Graham’s number is still a finite number. It is far larger than numbers such as a googol (10¹⁰⁰) or a googolplex (10^(10¹⁰⁰)), yet it remains tiny compared with some other mathematical quantities used in advanced set theory and logic. One interesting fact is that mathematicians have calculated its last digits: Graham’s number ends in …2464195387. #edit #makethisblowup #trend #ai #fyp