The question cannot be answered. Any number of zeros will still be zero: you will never ever get to 80 million.
There are 13 zeros in 80 trillion.
80 trillion is the answer, because if you look at it for a long time you will see all the zeros.
You add two zeros at the end of the answer 80*90=7200
10 followed by 80 zeroes.
yes yes it is it has 80 zeros after the number. :)
The question cannot be answered. Any number of zeros will still be zero: you will never ever get to 80 million.
There are 13 zeros in 80 trillion.
80 trillion is the answer, because if you look at it for a long time you will see all the zeros.
The number 286, followed by 80 with a space between.
There are 10 zeros in 80 billion (80,000,000,000).
100,000,000 = 108(108)10 = 1080That's ' 1 ' followed by 80 zeros.That makes it (1 googol)-20.
Yes, a googol is larger than the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe. A googol is 1 followed by 100 zeros, while the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe is around 10^80.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the big numbers! So, like, when you multiply 1 with 30 zeros by another number with 50 zeros, you end up with a number that has 80 zeros in total. It's like combining a gazillion zeros together, but hey, who's counting, right?
4.
Recall that any number to the power 0 is always equal to 1. So 10^0 (read that as "10 to the power 0") equals 1. and 10^1 = 10 10^2 = 100 10^3 = 1000 10^4 = 10000. Notice something? 10^any integer = 1 followed by "any integer" zeroes. So, 10^100 = 1 followed by 100 zeroes. Oldsniper
0.8 is a decimal. The trick is to move the decimal point two spaces to the right (and fill the empty spaces with zeros). So then it becomes 080. Except we don't read the zeros before a number, and don't need a decimal point afterwards because it's a whole. So 80. 80%