Division by zero is not infinity, it is a forbidden operation in mathematics.
domain: (-infinity to infinity) range: ( -infinity to infinity)
(-infinity, infinity)
5 times 5 divided by 5 times 0 equals infinity or undefined. Division by zero is undefined
This is the graph of a diagnol line. Range: (-infinity, infinity)
Both extend from negative infinity to positive infinity.
It is negative infinity.
domain: (-infinity to infinity) range: ( -infinity to infinity)
Negative infinity plus negative infinity equals negative infinity.
(-infinity, infinity)
1 time infinity equals infinity. Infinite divided by infinite equals 1. There's your answer. * * * * * Except that it is not true. 1 times infinity is, indeed, infinity. But infinity divided by infinity need not be 1. See for example, the paradox of Hibert's Hotel at the attached link.
infinity is 1+2+4+8+16...=? so there is is nothing common because infinity does not equal anything( unless you get technical then it equals -1)
5 times 5 divided by 5 times 0 equals infinity or undefined. Division by zero is undefined
-infinity to positive infinity
Theoretically, five times infinity equals infinity.
There are an infinity of possible answers: involving addition, sutraction, multiplication, division, powers, roots and a host of other mathematical operations. One of the simplest is 251 + 1
it would be unditermand because noone actually knows what infinity is because numbers go on forever :)
This is the graph of a diagnol line. Range: (-infinity, infinity)