You're probably imagining the number written out in a string of zeros, NOT in exponential notation. (Notepad doesn't handle exponential notation anyway.) The definition of 1 googolplex is: '1' followed by a googol zeros. In an ASCII text file, each character is represented by one byte of data. All the data in your file consists predominantly of the character "0", and there are a googol of them in the file. So the file size must be roughly one googol-Byte. 1 googol is 10100. A good sized hard-drive holds 1 TB = 1012 Bytes. So your Notepad file would fill 1088 1-TB drives ... more than have ever been or are ever likely to be manufactured. Let's not even think about the time required to save or retrieve the file.
Googolplex is usually written 10googol. Also 1010 to the 100th power or 10^{10^{100}} If you were to type the number googolplex out using times new roman size 1 font then the number would be about 20 times the length of this universe. (Seriously). Googolplex is the second largest number. Googolplexian is the largest number.
To write a googolplexian, you would start with a 1 followed by a googolplex number of zeros. A googolplex is 10 raised to the power of a googol, which is 10^100. So a googolplex is 10^(10^100). Therefore, a googolplexian would be written as 10^(10^(10^100)).
A googol is 10^100, and a googolplex is 10^googol, which is 10^(10^100). So, googolplex raised to the power of googolplex would be (10^(10^100))^(10^(10^100)). This can be simplified to 10^(10^100 * 10^(10^100)), which is an incredibly large number with 10^10000 digits.
A googolplex is 10 to the power of a googol, which is 10 to the power of 100. Therefore, a googolplex is 10^(10^100). Subtracting 1 from a googolplex would result in a number that is still incredibly close to a googolplex itself, given the immense size of a googolplex. The resulting number would be almost indistinguishable from a googolplex in practical terms.
Googolduplex (and some variations).See related links.The numbers actually are googol and googolplex. Google is the website. See related link for an idea of the scale of googol and googolplex, especially the part where Carl Sagan explains that to write out the number googolplex would require more space than is in the known universe.
In mathematics, a googol is 10100 (10 to the power of 100), or the number 1 followed by 100 zeros. A googolplex is 10googol, or the number 1 followed by a googol of zeros. A googol and a googolplex are both so large that if one was able to count at lightspeed (i.e. in one second, you can count from 1 to 186,000), it would still take you approximately 1015 years to count to googol and 1018 years to count to googolplex. Both amounts of time are longer than the universe is estimated to have been around. A number larger still than a googolplex is the Graham's number, which is so large that not even power towers can be used to write it out (while a googolplex can also be written as 1010100, Graham's number can't be written with exponents). Graham's number is so large that if you add all the atoms in the universe together, you would still not get to it. But there is a way to calculate Graham's Number. 5 Up arrows^3 equal G1 but that's not Graham's Number 6 uparrows^3 equal G2 so 69 up arrows^3 equal Grahams number
A googol is 10 to the power of 100, and a googolplex is 10 to the power of a googol (or 10 to the power of 10^100). A googolplexian is 10 to the power of a googolplex, which is a number so large it's practically incomprehensible. The number of zeros in a googolplexian would be a 1 followed by a googolplex number of zeros.
Mathematically = No. Googolplex is a number, and you can do all the mathematical operations with it. For example: (2 googolplex) plus (2 googolplex) = 4 googolplex. Infinity is more than any number you can write, and you can't do any mathematical operations with it. Example: (Infinity) divided by (3,000) = still infinity. Another example (I can't resist this): (Infinity) divided by (googolplex) = still infinity. But in our physical universe, nothing is infinite! Here's an example. If you were to fill the universe (its entire volume) with particles and with no empty spaces, it would take about 10^80 particles. Therefore you wouldn't even have enough space in the universe to write the number googolplex!
AnswerA googol is 1 with 100 zeros.A googolplex is 1 with a googol of zeros.A googolplex is 10 to the power of a googol. In other words, it is 10000000...for a googol amount of times.A googolplex is the number 1 followed by 10100 zerosPer an astronomy show called Cosmic Journeys, if you wrote out all of the zeros of a googolplex in tiny 1 point font, it would stretch beyond the diameter of the observable Universe.
No, but a "googolplex" is. It is equal to 10googol, a googol being 10100. In other words, a googolplex is equal to 101000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000. Writing that number out in it's full form is impossible, as there is not enough storage space in the world for it. In fact, if you were to attempt to write out the number, there would not be enough space in the universe to write it. It is however a number, despite the impossibility of truly conceiving it's size.
about 32,000,000 googolplex.
There are fewer than a googol atoms in the known universe so a googolplex atoms would be outrageously huge.