Centillion * * * * * No. Strictly speaking, it would be ten trillion. Another possible answer, though less accurate, would be quadrillions.
unvigintillion
Ten trillions comes after trillions place value.
After noncentillion comes decicentillion. In the short scale system, a centillion is equal to 10^303, and each successive -centillion represents another 303 zeros after the 1. Therefore, decicentillion would be 10^606.
centillion
Centillion * * * * * No. Strictly speaking, it would be ten trillion. Another possible answer, though less accurate, would be quadrillions.
Millentinion, one thousand centillion
One thousand. Which is a lot, lot smaller than a centillion.
unvigintillion
Ten trillions comes after trillions place value.
The place value after tenths is hundredths.
4.3% of the universe (~45 Billion Light year diameter) is Planets, Gases and Such. Dark Matter (WMP, or Weakly Interacting Mass Particle) is invisible. If my math is correct, (and i did it on a hitachi supercomputer) the universe should weigh around... 790 centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion centillion Tonnes, to the 947,304,691,120,161,109,425e+4964546546516548897984351th Power! I Guess About 74 followed by trllions of trillions of trillions of digits, pounds thats heavy
centillion
The place value after millions is billions.
1 centillion = 10303
centillion zeros (centillion is 303 zeros)
1 centillion = 10303