Well, darling, technically speaking, infinity isn't a number, it's a concept representing something endless. So, if you wanna get all technical, two times infinity is still infinity because no matter how many times you multiply infinity by a finite number, you're still left with infinity. Math can be a real buzzkill sometimes, huh?
that would be 2 times infinity.
negative infinity
I can see two different ways to place the parentheses in that question. Here are both answers: ( e-2 ) x infinity = infinity ( e-2 x infinity ) = zero
Oh, dude, negative infinity times negative infinity is technically positive infinity. It's like when you multiply two negatives, they cancel each other out and become positive. So yeah, in the wild world of math, that's how it rolls.
infinity divided by any finite number is also infinity.
that would be 2 times infinity.
2 infinity and beond
infinity
negative infinity
An unknown number x times infinity would be infinity.
I can see two different ways to place the parentheses in that question. Here are both answers: ( e-2 ) x infinity = infinity ( e-2 x infinity ) = zero
infinity!
Ironically, the answer is: infinity (Infinity is a concept not a number)
Zero times infinity is defined as "indeterminate".
It is still infinity.
infinity. anything times infinity is infinity (with the exception of indeterminant forms like infinity/infinity)
Oh, dude, negative infinity times negative infinity is technically positive infinity. It's like when you multiply two negatives, they cancel each other out and become positive. So yeah, in the wild world of math, that's how it rolls.