what is after the sextillions
A sextillion is only 10 with 21 zeros after it, there are many more numbers that are more than a sextillion such as septillion, octillion, nonlillion, decillion, etc. A googol, which is 10 to the 100th power, is bigger than a sextillion.
3 sextillions
The number that directally comes after sextillio;n is sextillion and one. The order of numbers is . . . sextillion, octillion . . .
Number of zerosU.S. & scientific communityOther countries3thousandthousand6millionmillion9billion1000 million (1 milliard)12trillionbillion15quadrillion1000 billion18quintilliontrillion21sextillion1000 trillion24septillionquadrillion27octillion1000 quadrillion30nonillionquintillion33decillion1000 quintillion36undecillionsextillion39duodecillion1000 sextillion42tredecillionseptillion45quattuordecillion1000 septillion48quindecillionoctillion51sexdecillion1000 octillion54septendecillionnonillion57octodecillion1000 nonillion60novemdecilliondecillion63vigintillion1000 decillion66 - 120undecillion - vigintillion303centillion600centillion
septillions
3 sextillions
Trillions is followed by quadrillions, quintillions, sextillions, septillions, octillions, nonillions and decillions.
The number that directally comes after sextillio;n is sextillion and one. The order of numbers is . . . sextillion, octillion . . .
Quintillion and one.Alternate Answer 1: I think you might want 'Tens of Quintillions', then 'Hundreds of Quintillions', then 'Sextillions'. Does this help?
After Billions (Bi, two) come trillions (tri, three) and then quadrillions (quad, four) and then quintillions (quint, five) and then sextillions (sexta, six). Beyond that, it is easier to use scientific notation for very large numbers. "Zillions" and then "gazillions" are terms for indefinite but extremely large numbers.
You have scientific notation, expressed in words. That is the normal way of stating a figure like that. 7.167 x 1023 . That means you have 23 digits between the 7 and the decimal point. You could write it out: 716700000000000000000000, but what's the use of that? Whoever reads it just has to count zeros again to make it something useful. Yes, you can put commas in: 716,700,000,000,000,000,000,000 and remember in American English we name groups of three digits thousands, hundred thousands, millions, billions, trillions, quadrillions, quintillions, sextillions, septillions .... and then call it: 716 sextillions, 700 quintillion. That really helps!
It is ALMOST impossible the universe will end, but if it does, it will probably in 5 billion years for humans, but sextillions of years for space. If that happens, no atoms will be left. Nothing will be there. No air. No water. No planets. No stars. No light. No floating stuff. No rocks. No life. No scents. No food. No aliens. No humans! No atoms=Nothing.
Number of zerosU.S. & scientific communityOther countries3thousandthousand6millionmillion9billion1000 million (1 milliard)12trillionbillion15quadrillion1000 billion18quintilliontrillion21sextillion1000 trillion24septillionquadrillion27octillion1000 quadrillion30nonillionquintillion33decillion1000 quintillion36undecillionsextillion39duodecillion1000 sextillion42tredecillionseptillion45quattuordecillion1000 septillion48quindecillionoctillion51sexdecillion1000 octillion54septendecillionnonillion57octodecillion1000 nonillion60novemdecilliondecillion63vigintillion1000 decillion66 - 120undecillion - vigintillion303centillion600centillion
After quadrillions, the next number in the sequence of large numbers is quintillions. In the short scale system, which is commonly used in the United States and many other countries, quintillion represents (10^{18}) or one followed by 18 zeros. The sequence continues with sextillions, septillions, and so on, each increasing by a factor of a thousand.
The Earth does not "weigh" in the traditional sense, as weight depends on the gravitational pull acting on an object. However, scientists estimate the Earth's mass to be about 5.97 sextillion metric tons (or 5.97 x 10^24 kg). So, while we don't refer to Earth's mass as its weight, it can be understood to have a mass equivalent to sextillions of tons.
You could be at any age to die. You actually can't live in the 200s or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000s. A sextillion was not the time the Universe existed. (By the way, living in the sextillions is impossible, silly, and doesn't make any sense.) You could be 1 second old to die, or be 125 years old (that's actually how long the oldest person lived) to die. You could even be a child. Examples to dying are drowning, car crashing, plane crashing, being shot, poison, being stabbed, etc.The Question is a kind of confusing, if u die when u are 18years old the it is 18, if 35yrs old then it is 35.Thus if you wish to know something else, then be more specific.