It is of the order of one hundred sextillion.
115 days, 10 hours, 46 minutes and 40 seconds
depends on the denomination of the dollar, a penny will take alot longer then 100 bills, also depends if you can count past 10
10 ^ 42, or 1 trecedillion. In other countries, it is a septillion.
Naturally, it depends on how fast you count. If you count 10 every second and you don't take any breaks, then you hit 1 trillion during the 328th day of the 3,168th year.
Just like any other assignment, how soon you finish depends on how fast you count.If you count 10 every second, and never stop to eat, sleep, breathe, or anything else,you can reach 1 sextillion in under 3,168,808,782,000 years (rounded) ... which is onlyabout 219 times as long as today is since the Big Bang.
It is of the order of one hundred sextillion.
10 sextillion would be 10,000,000,000 trillion.
The next place value after sextillion is 10 sextillion
[edited to correct my mistakes] It depends how fast you count. Let's say once per second without stopping to rest... 1 sextillion = 10^21 (ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_large_numbers) 1 year = 31 million seconds (rounded off) =~ 3x10^7 sec Therefore counting once per second it will take about (10^22)/(3x10^7) =~ 3x10^14 years = 300 trillion years. To put that in perspective: The Earth is 4.3 billion years old The universe is 14 billion years old. So it would take about 20,000 times the present age of the universe!!
It used to be. Parts of the UK used the "long" scale where a sextillion was 10^36. The short scale values a sextillion at 10^21. -------------------- America uses the Short scale which is based on powers of a thousand plus one → a sextillion = (10³)⁶⁺¹ = (10³)⁷ = 10²¹ The UK used to use the Long scale based on powers of a million: → a sextillion = (10⁶)⁶ = 10³⁶ In the 1970s the then Prime Minister declared that all government publications would use the Short scale; the general populace then followed suit - at school in the 1970s the Long scale was taught but now the Short scale is taught. In the 2010s we have the current government wanting to stay in Europe which uses the Long scale - go figure.
Well, honey, there are 10 million millions in a sextillion. So, if you do the math, that means there are a whopping 10,000 million millions in 10 sextillion. But hey, who's counting?
115 days, 10 hours, 46 minutes and 40 seconds
10 sextillion.
10 sextillion
The US does a census every 7-10 years.
The number of seconds it will take is(10)/(the average number of counts you make in one second)