If the question is a number with a set of 8 zeros behind it, the answer is a hundred million. If the question is, as stated, 8 sets of zeros, the answer depends on how big each set is.
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∙ 14y ago1,000,000,000 Three sets of zeros. Each set has 3 zeros.
No, because there are an infiite number of sets that contain -5. For example {-5, 8}, which does not even have a name.
I think it is 39. Everyone keeps saying 39, but you would think a duodecillion would have twelve sets of three zeros after it. (a billion has three sets of three zeros, quadrillion has five sets of three). I think it is 13 * 3 = 39, but now I am going to go look it up.
1.18 is a number and number do not contain any sets (of any kind).
They are not equivalent sets.
1,000,000,000 Three sets of zeros. Each set has 3 zeros.
he invented the number googol, which is a 1 followed by 100 sets of zeros hope that was helpful!
The number 15 belongs to an infinite amount of sets.
No, because there are an infiite number of sets that contain -5. For example {-5, 8}, which does not even have a name.
I think it is 39. Everyone keeps saying 39, but you would think a duodecillion would have twelve sets of three zeros after it. (a billion has three sets of three zeros, quadrillion has five sets of three). I think it is 13 * 3 = 39, but now I am going to go look it up.
It is a whole number, integer, and a rational number. :D
Together, the two sets comprise the set of real numbers.
Equivalent sets are sets with exactly the same number of elements.
1.18 is a number and number do not contain any sets (of any kind).
The sun sets behind the horizon.
They are not equivalent sets.
There are any number of finite sets. Some are: the number of seats on a bus, the number of bees in a hive, and the number grains of rice in a ton of the grain.