There are an infinite number of multiples of 20 that are larger than 20: any whole number larger than 1, such as 2...all the way to infinity: thus 2 x 20 = 40,3 x 20 = 60,4 x 20 = 80...infinity.
Infinity is any number greater than a number that already exists Infinity is any number greater than a number that already exists
No, infinity is not a digit. It is a concept used in mathematics to represent a quantity that is larger than any number. In the decimal system, digits are the symbols used to represent numbers (0-9).
Infinity does not ever equal one. The integer one may contain an infinite number of fractions. Interestingly, it has been proved that some infinities are larger than others.
There is only one place above it, that is Googolplexplex or googolduplex. It contains a googolplex of zero's. Greater than googolplexplex is only infinity.
Yes, except that infinity is not a number.
No, Infinity is never ending, where as a googolplex is a fixed number.
Infinity, it is larger than every number.
Because infinity is not a number, this question is incorrect. You may think of infinity as something that has no bounds and gets larger and larger.
Infinity is an undefined term that in reality will never be met, therefore there is no number larger than it. ex) infinity plus one is still equal to infinity
"Infinity" means different things in different context. As the size of a set, there is actually not one number infinity, but several: some infinities can be larger than others.
There are an infinite number of multiples of 20 that are larger than 20: any whole number larger than 1, such as 2...all the way to infinity: thus 2 x 20 = 40,3 x 20 = 60,4 x 20 = 80...infinity.
There is no number greater than infinity. Infinity is defined to be greater than any number, so there can not be two numbers, both infinity, that are different.However, when dealing with limits, one can approach a non-infinite value for a function involving infinity. Take, for example, 2x divided by x, when x is infinity. That value is indeterminate, because infinity divided by infinity is defined as indeterminate, and 2 times infinity is still infinity.But, if you look at the limit of 2x divided by x, as x approaches infinity, you do get a value, and that value is 2. This does not mean that 2x when x is infinity is twice infinity, it just means that, right before x becomes infinity, the ratio is right before 2.Infinity should not be thought of as a number, but rather as a direction. Whereas a number represents a specific quantity, infinity does not define given quantity. (If you started counting really fast for billions of years, you would never get to infinity.) There are, however, different "sizes of infinity." Aleph-null, for example, is the infinity that describes the size of the natural numbers (0,1,2,3,4....) The infinity that describes the size of the real numbers is much larger than aleph-null, for between any two natural numbers, there are infinite real numbers.Anyway, to improve upon the answer above, it is not meaningful to say "when x is infinity," because, as explained above, no number can "be" infinity. A number can approach infinity, that is to say, get larger and larger and larger, but it will never get there. Because infinity is not a number, there is no point in asking what number is more than infinity.
"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".
Yes there is, you can add a number to it or multiply it by a number more than one for example, and there is also the number infinity which is obviously larger. :)
To answer your question neither. They are the same because both answers are infinity. Infinity is the biggest number, but mainly just a concept. Nothing is bigger than it so if it was added or multiplied you would get the same answer because you can't go any higher.
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.