Posted on 11/28/2022 1:43:52 PM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
The World Champion largest number, listed in the latest Guinness Book of Records, is an upper bound, derived by R. L. Graham, from a problem in a part of combinatorics called Ramsey theory.
Graham’s number cannot be expressed using the conventional notation of powers, and powers of powers. If all the material in the universe were turned into pen and ink it would not be enough to write the number down. Consequently, this special notation, devised by Donald Knuth, is necessary.
3^3 means ‘3 cubed’, as it often does in computer printouts.
3^^3 means 3^(3^3), or 3^27, which is already quite large: 3^27 = 7,625,597,484,987, but is still easily written, especially as a tower of 3 numbers: 333.
3^^^3 = 3^^(3^^3), however, is 3^^7,625,597,484,987 = 3^(7,625,597,484,987^7,625,597,484,987), which makes a tower of exponents 7,625,597,484,987 layers high.
3^^^^3 = 3^^^(3^^^3), of course. Even the tower of exponents is now unimaginably large in our usual notation, but Graham’s number only starts here.
Consider the number 3^^^...^^^3 in which there are 3^^^^3 arrows. A largish number!
Next construct the number 3^^^...^^^3 where the number of arrows is the previous 3^^^...^^^3 number.
An incredible, ungraspable number! Yet we are only two steps away from the original ginormous 3^^^^3. Now continue this process, making the number of arrows in 3^^^...^^^3 equal to the number at the previous step, until you are 63 steps, yes, sixty-three, steps from 3^^^^3. That is Graham’s number.
There is a twist in the tail of this true fairy story. Remember that Graham’s number is an upper bound, just like Skewes’ number. What is likely to be the actual answer to Graham’s problem? Gardner quotes the opinions of the experts in Ramsey theory, who suspect that the answer is: 6. David Wells, Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers. 1986
So what’s the point? Not enough material in the universe to write the number. How is it relevant to anything if it can’t be used? Get a life.
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One of the purposes of math is to expand our understanding of the universe. Sometimes seemingly impractical or esoteric knowledge can prove useful, or lead to a deeper understanding of other problems. Math is logic.
Long ago, a mathematician invented the concept of zero. What is it? it’s nothing. But it’s probably one of the most powerful discoveries of modern mathematics.
You missed my pint entirely.
You missed my pint entirely.
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Apparently I did miss the pint. I hate missing a pint.
On par with Georg Cantor, perhaps? See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantor%27s_paradox
Didn’t Seinfeld have a show about that?
:-)
That’s become known as Biden’s number which is any number of votes a democrat needs to steal an election. It’s much higher than any of the other numbers in the article.
“If all the material in the universe...” Yeah, well. News flash: numbers are imaginary. No number needs to be written on a physical paper with physical ink. Aristotle knew this 340 BC. The largest number is reasonably theorized and fuzzily imagined.
It’s like helping Joe Sixpack understand the price of something by saying “dollar bills stacked to the moon.”
It is fascinating to say “there isn’t enough material in the universe to print out the biggest number.”
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