0.
This is the same as the limit of 1/x as x approaches infinity, which is is 0.
This is because
1/1,000 = .001
and
1/1,000,000 = .000001
and
1/100,000,000,000 = .0000000001
etc.
Furthermore, no number is equal to infinity because infinity is not a number, it is a concept, so theoretically, no number could be equal to it.
infinity is any number but usually 27 it can always be alive and dead and it is a fish
When any number is multiplied by zero, the product is zero.
Any specific number minus infinity is -∞ Note if you try to subtract infinity from infinity, the answer is undefined - because infinity is a "cardinality" rather than a specific number.
Infinity is as big as you can get, so there is no number after it.There is also a "negative infinity" going the other way, so the total number of integers could be considered as two infinity (2 x ∞), or two ∞ plus 1 if you include zero. But usually infinity is defined to include the entire set of integers.* * * * *Except that infinity plus infinity, or even infinity times infinity is still infinity. However, infinity to the power of infinity is a higher level of infinity (Aleph1 rather than Aleph0). And if that does not do your head in, there is a lot more to the mathematics of infinities.
Yes. Multiplying a negative number by a very large positive number will equal a large negative number. If you have the function y = -x, then as x approaches infinity, y will approach negative infinity at the same rate.
Furthermore, no number is equal to infinity because infinity is not a number, it is a concept, so theoretically, no number could be equal to it.
infinity! (and beyond)
infinity? Infinity over zero is undefined, or complex infinity depending on numbers you are including in your number system.
0 is the only number times infinity equal to 0
Infinity is more a concept than a number. But the answer would be a number that is so infinitesimally small as to basically equal zero.
Infinity is an undefined term that in reality will never be met, therefore there is no number larger than it. ex) infinity plus one is still equal to infinity
infinte means endless. and infinity covers anything after the last known real number. so no nothin over infinity because it doesnt end.
Firstly we don't know infinity value. If you divide any number by infinity then answer will be zero. Example is divide 100/3 by infinity ( let infinity is equal to 1/0). Then answer is 100/3/1/0 you will get zero.
1To touch on this whatever you take and divide by the same number will always give you one.2Infinity divided by infinity is not equal to 1, But it is undefined, not another infinity. This would help you:First, I am going to define this axiom (assumption) that infinity divided by infinity is equal to one:∞-∞= 1Since ∞ = ∞ + ∞, then we are going to substitute the first infinity in our axiom:∞ + ∞---∞= 1The next step is to split this fraction into two fractions:∞-∞+ ∞-∞= 1Next, substitute the axiom twice into the equation, we get:1 + 1 = 1Finally, this can be rewritten as:2 = 1Therefore, infinity divided by infinity is NOT equal to one. Instead we can get any real number to equal to one when we assume infinity divided by infinity is equal to one, so infinity divided by infinity is undefined.
The inverse of infinity is a number approaching zero but less than any other number. This means that it is close to zero but not equal to it, a infinitesimal number.
Firstly we don't know infinity value. If you divide any number by infinity then answer will be zero. Example is divide 100/3 by infinity ( let infinity is equal to 1/0). Then answer is 100/3/1/0 you will get zero.