No infinity is smaller than googolplexian
No.
No, there isn't a number bigger than infinity. Infinity is well, infinite, so it never finishes.
Infinity divided by any finite number is infinity. Here are the rules: 1. Infinity divided by a finite number is infinite (I / f = I); 2. Any finite number divided by infinity is a number infinitesimally larger than, but never equal to, zero (f / I = 1 / I); 3. Infinity divided by infinity is one (I / I = 1), or in fact any other positive number (I / I = and so on...); 4. Infinity multiplied by zero (no infinity) is zero (I * 0 = 0); 5. Infinity divided by a positive finite number is infinity (I / +f = I); 6. Infinity divided by a negative finite number is minus infinity (I / -f = -I); 7. Infinity divided by zero is not possible; 8. Infinity plus infinity is infinity (I + I = I); 9. Zero divided by infinity (nothing divided into infinity) equals zero (0 / I = 0); 10. Infinity plus a finite number is infinity (I + f = I); 11. Infinity minus a finite number is infinity (I - f = I); but 12. Infinity minus infinity, due to the nature of infinity, can be zero, infinity, or minus infinity (I - I = -I, 0, I).
"Googolplex" is a definite number. "Infinity" is bigger than any definite number, so it's bigger than a googolplex. No number is bigger than infinity. The only we can add to that is a suggestion that you learn how to spell "googolplex".
This is the same as asking "What is the largest prime number?". The answer would be infinity, but infinity isn't a number. There is no answer. Maybe you meant to ask: "What is the SMALLEST prime number greater than 200?". The answer to that is 211.
The inverse of infinity is a number approaching zero but less than any other number. This means that it is close to zero but not equal to it, a infinitesimal number.
Infinity is any number greater than a number that already exists Infinity is any number greater than a number that already exists
There is no number right before infinity. One could say that the number before infinity is "infinity minus one", but you cannot use normal subtraction with infinity. Infinity - 1 is still mathematically defined as infinity, as is Infinity + 1. Perhaps the question is referring to the largest number with its own name (other than infinity, which, as previously stated, is not technically a number). A googol is often cited as this number. A googol is defined to be a 1 with a hundred zeroes after it. Alternatively, a googolplex might qualify for the title of largest number with its own name, being a 1 with a googol zeroes after it. A couple of quick side notes are in order here: There are not a googolplex atoms in the visible universe. It is an extremely big number. The search engine company Google named their company after a googol, because of vast amount of information that they process and organize.
There is no "largest number in the world". If you add 1 to the number you wrote, you get a larger number. Omitting some zeroes: if your "largest number" is 1,000,000, add 1 to get 1,000,001. This will obviously be larger than the original number. People may think infinity is the largest number, but relativaly speaking infinity is not a number, therefor infinity goes on and on. Think of it as f(x)=x+1 if you substitute x for any number you will get a larger number that what x was. Googleplex which is 10^100 is too large to write on paper and is also larger than the universe. To sum up, there is no largest number. Nothing is faster than the speed of light. E=Mc2. Engery=mass times the speed of light squared.
No infinity is smaller than googolplexian
None. Infinity never ends, so nothing can be larger than it.
There is no such animal as "a number near infinity". Proof. Let n be a number near infinity. Multiply n by a million The result is still less than infinity, therefore n is less than one millionth of infinity. This can hardly be said to be "near". On the other hand, no matter how large a number n is, there is always a prime larger.
The Infinity is the largest UNSC craft ever built.
Yes, except that infinity is not a number.
Any specific number minus infinity is -∞ Note if you try to subtract infinity from infinity, the answer is undefined - because infinity is a "cardinality" rather than a specific number.
No.