Graham's Number - Numberphile

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  • čas přidán 3. 04. 2012
  • See our other Graham's Number videos: bit.ly/G_Number
    A number so epic it will collapse your brain into a black hole! Yet Tony Padilla and Matt Parker take the risk of discussing its magnitude. Watch with caution.
    More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓
    See also our video about the Googol and Googolplex at: • Googol and Googolplex ...
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Komentáře • 7K

  • @NoriMori1992
    @NoriMori1992 Před 5 lety +1148

    I love Wikipedia's description of how big Graham's number is: "It is so large that the observable universe is far too small to contain an ordinary digital representation of Graham's number, assuming that each digit occupies one Planck volume … But even the number of digits in this digital representation of Graham's number would itself be a number so large that its digital representation cannot be represented in the observable universe. Nor even can the number of digits of that number-and so forth, for a number of times far exceeding the total number of Planck volumes in the observable universe."

    • @philip8498
      @philip8498 Před 2 lety +223

      this reads like something from the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy

    • @RH-ro3sg
      @RH-ro3sg Před 2 lety +140

      And, while perfectly true, even that is an extreme understatement, in the sense that that description already is true for g1= 3↑↑↑↑3, the mere _initial number_ (with just 4 measly arrows), used to get up to Graham's number.
      Even for 3↑↑↑3 (three arrows), you'd have to repeat the 'number of digits' procedure several _trillion_ times to arrive at something humanly digestible (or at a number expressible within our observable universe as described in the quote). For 3↑↑↑↑3 (4 arrows) that number not only far exceeds the number of Planck volumes in the observable universe, but is utterly beyond human comprehension itself.

    • @andrewbloom7694
      @andrewbloom7694 Před rokem +28

      @@RH-ro3sg They are all well beyond human comprehension. You can try to define them with things like arrow notation sure, but you can't fundamentally UNDERSTAND something like that. Not even the smartest human can.

    • @RH-ro3sg
      @RH-ro3sg Před rokem +36

      @@andrewbloom7694 I think it depends on how exactly you'd define 'comprehension' or 'understanding'.
      In a rather strict sense - intuitively _grasping_ and _feeling_ the magnitude of a number and immediately recognizing it without conscious thought, we as humans probably don't truly 'get' any number beyond approximately 7. Beyond that, we have to start counting (or approximating), both of which are already more indirect ways of appreciating a number.
      In the sense of being to able to _visualize_ a number in some manner, I'd say our comprehension ends at around a googol, if we're being very charitable (possibly the limit is much lower). You're talking about imagery such as 'a hundred million of our observable universes, filled to the brim with grains of sand' then. I suppose that visualization of such a type is what most people think of when they say they 'comprehend' a number. But it's not the only way to get to understanding.
      Numbers such as Graham's number can still be 'understood', but in a more indirect way, namely by the procedures used to obtain them.
      Finally, there are numbers so large that even the procedures to obtain them cannot be described anymore, they can only be _characterized_ . Rayo's number would be an example.
      Also, I'm not really sure I truly _comprehend_ even a number as low as three. (As in: what is the ultimate essence of 'three-ness'?)

    • @vedantsridhar8378
      @vedantsridhar8378 Před rokem +10

      Not even the number of powers, not even the number of arrows actually!

  • @petertimowreef9085
    @petertimowreef9085 Před 8 lety +3689

    Mathemathicians are so funny.
    "Imagine a number that's unimaginably high. And then the answer is between that number, and 11. Childsplay really, let's go to the pub."

    • @MrCubFan415
      @MrCubFan415 Před 6 lety +159

      Actually, the lower bound is 13 now (and the upper bound has been reduced to 2^^^6).

    • @stefanr8232
      @stefanr8232 Před 6 lety +16

      where is link to proof?

    • @arnavanand8037
      @arnavanand8037 Před 6 lety +116

      2 + 2 = Something between -∞ and ∞

    • @arnavanand8037
      @arnavanand8037 Před 5 lety +11

      Or possibly between 5 and 5454545575454545457575757575757242454545454542424545454

    • @robinlindgren6429
      @robinlindgren6429 Před 5 lety +63

      to be fair, having reduced it to any range at all means they have narrowed it down to a ratio that approaches 0% of all numbers, that's practically being spot on!

  • @ve4410
    @ve4410 Před 2 lety +431

    "Can you give me a ballpark"
    "It's between 11 and Graham's number"
    "That's convenient".....

    • @austinlincoln3414
      @austinlincoln3414 Před 2 lety +2

      Lol

    • @FatherManus
      @FatherManus Před rokem +3

      Yeah that really narrows it down.

    • @finmat95
      @finmat95 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Ehy, previously it was between 6 and Graham's number, that's an improvement, you could at least thank me.

    • @user-hu9zi2jc2m
      @user-hu9zi2jc2m Před 5 měsíci

      REALLY convenient

  • @leisulin
    @leisulin Před 2 lety +907

    But even as they almost literally said: Graham's number is unimaginably large, but it's still closer to zero than it is to infinity! Which boggles the mind even more.

    • @yam1146
      @yam1146 Před 2 lety +15

      My brain is too small

    • @AA-el7ot
      @AA-el7ot Před 2 lety +79

      Infinity is not a number though

    • @franchstar1
      @franchstar1 Před 2 lety +80

      doesn't really boggles the mind since infinity is not a number but a concept and all numbers would be closer to zero.

    • @Crazytesseract
      @Crazytesseract Před 2 lety +14

      What do you mean by "closer to infinity"? If you say 5 is closer to infinity than 3, or Graham's number is closer to infinity than one trillion, that's fine; but it makes no difference to "infinity". Graham's number can be imagined extremely few.

    • @leisulin
      @leisulin Před 2 lety +9

      @@Crazytesseract I mean just what I said. Actually my comment comes from some cartoon that was forwarded to me (the name of which I don't remember) depicting a kid in bed saying to his dad "I'm not sleepy yet, could you tell me a bedtime PARADOX" (not story), and the dad says "every number is closer to zero than infinity, but still we approximate large numbers as infinite". Which knocks the kid unconscious from the paradoxical shock.

  • @theviniso
    @theviniso Před 8 lety +3632

    g64/g64=1. That's the only operation that I can do involving this number.

    • @panosm2007
      @panosm2007 Před 8 lety +575

      +Nastygamerx70 ­ (Yasser Moustaine) how about g64 * 0 = 0?

    • @panosm2007
      @panosm2007 Před 8 lety +26

      +Грамматический нацист nice

    • @connfdm
      @connfdm Před 8 lety +25

      g64÷0=error

    • @connfdm
      @connfdm Před 8 lety +194

      3^^^^^^^^^^...(g64 arrows)3 = g65

    • @connfdm
      @connfdm Před 7 lety +19

      g64-(g64-1)=1

  • @nthgth
    @nthgth Před 9 lety +3153

    "There's still an infinite number of numbers that're bigger than Graham's number, right? So frankly, we pretty much nailed it as far as I'm concerned." Lmao

    • @Ida-xe8pg
      @Ida-xe8pg Před 5 lety +88

      I actually know graham's number G64/G64 = 1 , G64-G64 = 0 , G64*G64 = G64^2 ,G64+G64 = G64*2!!

    • @Ida-xe8pg
      @Ida-xe8pg Před 5 lety +33

      Graham's Number! universe collapse

    • @shyshka_
      @shyshka_ Před 5 lety +35

      so does it mean that the calculation is infinitely precise?

    • @danielxu3594
      @danielxu3594 Před 5 lety +15

      @Fester Blats And also every number is less than Grahams number at the same time.

    • @zasharan2
      @zasharan2 Před 5 lety +7

      The thing is, can you actually express those bigger numbers without saying G64 + some other number, or without using that same strategy more times, and one guy named Rayo did that. He gave a statement that gave a number bigger than Graham’s number, without using the way graham got his number.

  • @onebigadvocado6376
    @onebigadvocado6376 Před 4 lety +229

    "There's a very easy analogy"
    (Promptly fails the analogy)

  • @ottoweininger8156
    @ottoweininger8156 Před 6 lety +107

    The bit where he said we've narrowed it in from between 6 and Graham's Number, to between 11 and Graham's Number made me laugh.

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před rokem

      yeah, both 6 and 11 are tiny compared to even g1, let alone g64

    • @MABfan11
      @MABfan11 Před 9 měsíci +2

      the new lower bound is 13

    • @AzertyWasTaken
      @AzertyWasTaken Před 2 měsíci

      I believe that the answer to the problem is a huge number but proving lower bounds is very hard.

  • @X-3K
    @X-3K Před 8 lety +3981

    So basically, this number happened because someone gave a Mathematician a coloring book.

  • @123games1
    @123games1 Před 8 lety +633

    Graham's number is so insanely large that the number representing the number of digits in Graham's number would have an incomprehensible number of digits itself!

    • @jakethornton7
      @jakethornton7 Před 8 lety +60

      +123games1 That even starts to apply around G1.

    • @RockerSkate1423
      @RockerSkate1423 Před 8 lety +15

      +123games1 Yeah man, even the number of digits would be a mind-blowing number, it's just insane.

    • @drinkingthatkool-aid3193
      @drinkingthatkool-aid3193 Před 8 lety +34

      +Andrés Ramírez Yep even 3^^5 already has 0.61 x 10^(3.64 trillion)....DIGITS. And you still need to go down 7.6 trillion 3's to get 3^^^3.

    • @RH-ro3sg
      @RH-ro3sg Před 3 lety +41

      In fact, if you repeated that process (the number representing the number of digits of the number representing the number of digits of Graham's number), and then again, and so on, even the _number of times you'd have to repeat that process_ to arrive at a number comprehensible for average humans would _still_ form an incomprehensibly large number of digits.
      And probably repeating the process on _that_ number still would. And so on. As a commentator once put it: "Graham's number is far larger than most people's intuitive conception of _infinity_ .
      ((Coincidentally, taking 'the number of digits' approximately is what you are doing when taking the logarithm of a number, so essentially we are talking here about log(log(log((log(g64) and the number of 'logs' you'd need to arrive at something digestible))
      ".

    • @user-bc3ri8ez9c
      @user-bc3ri8ez9c Před 3 lety +1

      Even the universe isn't enough to make a 1%

  • @The_Story_Of_Us
    @The_Story_Of_Us Před 2 lety +205

    What makes Graham’s Number so great is that despite its (literally) unfathomable size, we can using less than a page’s worth of word’s describe how to get there. We can describe what 3↑3 means, we can describe what 3↑↑3 means, what 3↑↑↑3 means and what 3↑↑↑↑3 means, then we can describe what G1 is, all the way up to G64, all of it a process of iteration. And using just the power of these symbols and descriptive iteration, we can arrive at a number with 100% precision that arithmetic literally can’t even come close to describing. So when we say that we can’t picture Graham’s Number, I think that’s doing our brains a disservice.

    • @The_Story_Of_Us
      @The_Story_Of_Us Před rokem +11

      @Oak Tree but we do legally own it.
      Whereas a number like TREE(3) is just so big we can’t describe it all, we don’t know how to arrive at that number via iterative process.

    • @The_Story_Of_Us
      @The_Story_Of_Us Před rokem +3

      @Oak Tree I mean obviously they’re there. If you just divide 1 by Graham’s Number for example, but in terms of something practically applicable like Tree 3 or Graham’s Number, then yeah, that’d be cool.

    • @MABfan11
      @MABfan11 Před rokem +3

      @@The_Story_Of_Us Bird's Array Notation can reach TREE(3) and beyond

    • @The_Story_Of_Us
      @The_Story_Of_Us Před rokem

      @@MABfan11 How do we even begin to know these kind of things?…

    • @BokanProductions
      @BokanProductions Před rokem +1

      You guys know how the new Webb Satellite from NASA allowed us to see more of the observable universe? I believe it's only a matter of time before we can see enough of the universe that Graham's Number could theoretically fit it in it.

  • @Dogebloxian
    @Dogebloxian Před 2 lety +54

    "Graham's number is still closer to zero than it is to infinity"

    • @bunnyloverplayz1371
      @bunnyloverplayz1371 Před rokem +4

      Well obviously all numbers are

    • @jd9119
      @jd9119 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Zero and Graham's number are both numbers. Infinity isn't a number. It's a direction on a number line.

    • @jamesworley9888
      @jamesworley9888 Před 4 měsíci

      Space is the only thing that we know for sure must be infinite, even if the universe isn't the space beyond and within it is. The only exception would be if somewhere we were surrounded by an infinite brick wall, and again there must be an infinite amount of space to contain it , so space is and must be infinite, there is no other possibility.

    • @jd9119
      @jd9119 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@jamesworley9888 That's not true. You're making an assumption.

    • @jamesworley9888
      @jamesworley9888 Před 4 měsíci

      @@jd9119 There is no assumption, I never said ''the universe'' IE ''the stuff IN space is infinite. I said space itself is infinite and no 'one who can think for 5 seconds is able to disagree. Tell me what wall could exist that says ''space ends here'', such a thought is utter nonsense. Especially sense the wall couldn't exist without an infinite volume. Your head would have to be thicker than that wall to even think such a thing or second guess the logic. Tell me where the space ends and anyone can debunk you simply by asking what is beyond that??? The answer is and can only be more volume IE SPACE!!!! You DMF

  • @MordredMS
    @MordredMS Před 8 lety +5561

    I actually came up with an even bigger number.
    Graham's Number+1.
    I call it "Mr. Whiskers".

    • @glass7923
      @glass7923 Před 8 lety +101

      XD

    • @prometheusxo6013
      @prometheusxo6013 Před 7 lety +335

      I wish comments like this show up more. Now it seems like channel promotion and pepole asking for likes are tue only thing I see, stuff like this is what the internet is for

    • @vlh371
      @vlh371 Před 7 lety +276

      The reason Grahams number is special is because it was used to solve a problem. Grahams number plus 1 isn't useful.

    • @valhalla4558
      @valhalla4558 Před 7 lety +172

      I came up with a far bigger number. Grahams number to the power of googolplexian. I call it "Mr Puff"

    • @glass7923
      @glass7923 Před 7 lety +16

      Keyslam Games I call it "Lo Wang"

  • @livinlicious
    @livinlicious Před 10 lety +836

    The first digit of Grahams Number is 1. (in Binary)

    • @Gonzaga78
      @Gonzaga78 Před 9 lety +9

      Hurr Durr

    • @chrisroberts4599
      @chrisroberts4599 Před 9 lety +55

      The first digit of Graham's number is 1 in Unary, Binary and Ternary. What are the odds?

    • @PattyManatty
      @PattyManatty Před 9 lety +18

      Chris Roberts In ternary it could be 2.

    • @chrisroberts4599
      @chrisroberts4599 Před 9 lety +84

      PattyManatty Nope, it's a one. 10^N always start with 1 in decimal, and 3^N will always start with 1 in ternary.

    • @PrimusProductions
      @PrimusProductions Před 9 lety +45

      Graham's number is odd
      Graham's number is divisible by 3,9,27 and all powers of 3 up to Graham's number,
      log(3,G64) is an integer
      The last digit of Graham's number is 1 in Binary (because it is odd).

  • @sproins
    @sproins Před 2 lety +69

    Other mathematicians explaining big numbers: You'd run out of space to write down all the digits.
    Matt Parker: You'd run out of pens in the universe.

  • @grantmayberry7358
    @grantmayberry7358 Před 5 lety +36

    8:30 "We pretty much nailed it as far as I'm concerned." Never mind the fact that that number is longer than the observable universe.

    • @BokanProductions
      @BokanProductions Před rokem +1

      You guys know how the new Webb Satellite from NASA allowed us to see more of the observable universe? I believe it's only a matter of time before we can see enough of the universe that Graham's Number could theoretically fit it in it.

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před rokem

      @@BokanProductions Let's first try and find a way of writing down the full expanded value of 3↑↑↑3 (the tower itself reaches to the Sun), then go to 3↑↑↑↑3, then go from there.

    • @BokanProductions
      @BokanProductions Před rokem

      @@TheSpotify95 Alright, I get it you don't need to explain more.

  • @squirrelknight9768
    @squirrelknight9768 Před 9 lety +684

    "Frankly, we pretty much nailed it!"
    Lol that cracked me up

    • @NoriMori1992
      @NoriMori1992 Před 9 lety +40

      Same! And his face when he says it is priceless.

    • @MrFrak0207
      @MrFrak0207 Před 7 lety +9

      SquirrelKnight I love that guy Hahahha

  • @megatrix500
    @megatrix500 Před 7 lety +2040

    now... Gn↑↑↑↑↑...↑↑↑↑↑Gn.
    |---Gn times---|
    Let the universe collapse.

    • @Daniel-dc5mr
      @Daniel-dc5mr Před 7 lety +25

      Megatrix500 wow

    • @Scias
      @Scias Před 7 lety +247

      Just writing that endangers the existence of the universe, be careful lol

    • @eclipseskaters
      @eclipseskaters Před 7 lety +131

      Still an infinite amount of numbers larger than that number.

    • @ashen_cs
      @ashen_cs Před 7 lety +59

      Haven't even reached Aleph^1 yet

    • @abacussssss
      @abacussssss Před 7 lety +62

      Less than g66.

  • @emmeeemm
    @emmeeemm Před 3 lety +25

    lol, I love that Graham's Number is so huge that it takes multiple mathematicians to explain it in one Numberphile video.

    • @asusmctablet9180
      @asusmctablet9180 Před rokem +1

      And yet we know that Graham's Number has a Persistence of 2. Let THAT sink in.

  • @guepardiez
    @guepardiez Před 5 lety +275

    Graham once taught a king how to play chess, and the king promised to give him g1 grains of rice for the first square on the chess board, g2 grains for the second square, g3 grains for the third square...

    • @apollog2574
      @apollog2574 Před 4 lety +53

      And so the universe was annihilated

    • @donovanshea3308
      @donovanshea3308 Před 3 lety +74

      And henceforth the Venezuelan currency was inflated beyond belief

    • @bachpham5025
      @bachpham5025 Před 2 lety +18

      Jokes aside. Even if the king promised to give him only 1 grain of rice for the first square, 2 grains for the second, 4 grains for the third, 8 grains for the forth…etc ; the king cant keep his promise with all the rice on earth!

    • @SirBojo4
      @SirBojo4 Před rokem

      @@donovanshea3308 Consequently Uncle Sam embargo'd Venezuela to space-time's fabric decay!

    • @pholdway5801
      @pholdway5801 Před měsícem

      I read this story in a book on maths that i got for a Christmas present when I was 8 years old It was big and a reddish pink colour on it's hardback cover , I still have it. It also had Pythagorean triangle story with large coloured illustrations.

  • @doemaeries
    @doemaeries Před 10 lety +372

    In the next math test I just write 6

  • @opmike343
    @opmike343 Před 7 lety +296

    Well, that escalated quickly...

    • @samarvora7185
      @samarvora7185 Před 5 lety +16

      Congratulations, dear sir! You've summed up the entire video!

    • @cate01a
      @cate01a Před 3 lety +3

      yes! I've just been learning about n^^x and then when you've 3^^^^3 I'm going 'woah mate calm down' but then he comes in with g2=3(3^^^^3 ^'s)3 and I mean that's worthy of a stupidly large immense number but then it's g64! woah!

    • @Combobattle
      @Combobattle Před 2 lety

      exponentiated quickly

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cate01a g64! would be Graham´s Number, factorial. Go Graham´s Number times (Graham´s Number-1), so on all the way down to one, which is a catastrophically large number, so much bigger than Graham´s number that G64 might as well be 0 compared to it.

    • @karlfeldlager7662
      @karlfeldlager7662 Před 5 měsíci

      @@robertjarman3703 Had you said 1 instead of 0, OK. But 0? 0 is stupidly tiny, I should say. Anyway, G64! is WAY below G65, for starts.

  • @sebastianweigand
    @sebastianweigand Před rokem +89

    Love the channel, keep up the great work!

  • @verdi8325
    @verdi8325 Před 2 lety +8

    This is my favourite CZcams video of all time. Absolutely blows my mind.

  • @cameronpotter2493
    @cameronpotter2493 Před 9 lety +495

    The real problem makes wayyyyy more sense than the weird analogy about the committees and people thing.

    • @thomashudson9524
      @thomashudson9524 Před 3 lety +9

      Thank you

    • @xCorvus7x
      @xCorvus7x Před 2 lety +11

      Care to describe it, while you're at it?

    • @NoriMori1992
      @NoriMori1992 Před 2 lety +3

      @@xCorvus7x Ron Graham describes it in another Numberphile video.

    • @Kunal29Chopra
      @Kunal29Chopra Před 2 lety +14

      they actually didn't do a great job here, explaining the committee analogy, with the switches between Tony and Matt, also the fact that they were saying the analogy right from their head, but if read in a paper, the analogy is actually very easy to follow.

    • @adamqazsedc
      @adamqazsedc Před 2 lety +1

      @@xCorvus7x Graham himself actually explained the number, the proper and more understandable way

  • @user-gi3ro9rm9k
    @user-gi3ro9rm9k Před 8 lety +193

    i will give the man who tells me the entire graham's number a nobel peace prize for stopping the chaos going inside my head right now

    • @delilahfox3427
      @delilahfox3427 Před 7 lety +43

      Kyu Hong Kim
      That's physically impossible.

    • @vgamerul4617
      @vgamerul4617 Před 5 lety +1

      @@delilahfox3427 tf

    • @vgamerul4617
      @vgamerul4617 Před 5 lety +5

      @strontiumXnitrate killed 2852 kids' hope

    • @NotAGoodUsername360
      @NotAGoodUsername360 Před 5 lety +12

      Actually, quantum mechanics forbids this.

    • @Dexuz
      @Dexuz Před 4 lety +23

      The universe may as well collapse and recreate itself a g63 times before that man ends.

  • @EliasMheart
    @EliasMheart Před 4 měsíci +1

    Funny way to threaten someone as a weird supervillain:
    "Hands up, or I'll think of Graham's Number, and this whole area will go down!!"
    xD

  • @SnlDrako
    @SnlDrako Před 6 lety +19

    Math. Where you can put it "it's somewhere between 6 and Grahams Number" and be considered precise AF, while messing up two decimal points in an equation and still fail in class. I love math.

  • @ckmishn3664
    @ckmishn3664 Před 7 lety +263

    According to the holographic principle the most data (bits) that can be stored in a volume is equal to the area of a bounding sphere in Planck lengths squared divided by 4. The visible universe is about 10^26 meters in length and Planck length is ~10^-35, so very roughly the visible universe can contain something like 10^122 bits of data before being "full" and collapsing into a black hole.
    Writing out, or otherwise listing the full expansion of a number without resorting to exponents, arrow-notation, recursion or other methods of compression requires a number of bits equal to the log of the number.
    Saying that your brain would collapse into a black hole if you had all the digits of Graham's Number in your head is one of the all-time biggest understatements. The entire visible Universe actually can't even contain the expansion of 3(three arrow)3. In fact even if you use exponents but just insist on printing out the exponents you still can't print out the expansion of 3(four arrow)3. Even resorting to arrow notation I think it's impossible to print out the expansion for the number of arrows any more than three levels lower.

    • @YanTales
      @YanTales Před 7 lety +6

      but we can imagine it, and we are imagining it with our physical brain so it can exist and it does.

    • @ckmishn3664
      @ckmishn3664 Před 7 lety +28

      Gaming Power Cool. Please imagine it and tell me what the first digit of Graham's number is (in base 10).

    • @YanTales
      @YanTales Před 7 lety +27

      Patrick Wise its between 0 and 9

    • @ckmishn3664
      @ckmishn3664 Před 7 lety +6

      Gaming Power So you know for a fact it's not a 9? Well that's something I guess.

    • @YanTales
      @YanTales Před 7 lety +5

      Patrick Wise my bad, between 0 and 9 including 9.

  • @StardropGaming
    @StardropGaming Před 8 lety +1768

    Plot twist: Graham's Number + 2 is prime.

    • @martinshoosterman
      @martinshoosterman Před 8 lety +113

      +StarDrop +Rip proving that.

    • @tannerearth0396
      @tannerearth0396 Před 6 lety +134

      (2^G)+1 is prime. I checked

    • @dennismuller1141
      @dennismuller1141 Před 6 lety +167

      @TannerEarth03 - GTA Boss
      actually, (2^n)+1 can only be prime if n is a power of 2. G is a power of 3, so (2^G)+1 can't be prime. primes in the form of (2^n) + 1 are called Fermat-primes btw

    • @reuben2011
      @reuben2011 Před 5 lety +30

      Wikipedia has a proof. The idea is that you can always factor a sum of odd powers (e.g. x^3+y^3). Now, if n were not a power of 2, then it has an odd prime factor p. So you can write n = kp where k is some integer. Thus, 2^n + 1 = 2^(kp) + 1 = (2^k)^p + 1^p and thus we've written 2^n+1 as a sum of odd powers (which factors).

    • @NeemeVaino
      @NeemeVaino Před 5 lety +13

      @@dennismuller1141 Fermat numbers are of form 2^2^n+1 and there is no known primes for n>4. Mersenne numbers are of form 2^n-1 and contain large primes but very sparsely.

  • @TheJaredtheJaredlong
    @TheJaredtheJaredlong Před 5 lety +18

    I still can't imagine what logical sequence of steps gives you such a massive number as an answer.

    • @tristo2005
      @tristo2005 Před rokem +2

      Numbers can get really big really fast given the right equation

  • @gupta-pw5xb
    @gupta-pw5xb Před 6 lety +35

    *Infinity* : Here's my son

    • @j.hawkins8779
      @j.hawkins8779 Před 3 lety

      With TREE(3) being either the older or younger brother LOL

  • @marcelinozerpa3947
    @marcelinozerpa3947 Před 8 lety +504

    I got lost at "committee"

  • @unclvinny
    @unclvinny Před 8 lety +170

    I like to think about Graham's Number before I go off to sleep. Thanks, Numberphile!

    • @hymnodyhands
      @hymnodyhands Před 6 lety +15

      unclvinny I thought I was the only one... Why count sheep when you can count endless towers of threes?

    • @blue9139
      @blue9139 Před 5 lety +3

      I think of utter obvilion lol

    • @idioting
      @idioting Před 4 lety +3

      im definitely going to not sleep for 70 days after this

    • @cate01a
      @cate01a Před 3 lety +6

      ​@@hymnodyhands three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three three to the three to the three...

  • @jarchibald14
    @jarchibald14 Před 3 lety +3

    This is one of the best videos on youtube, I come back once every couple years and watch it to get again

  • @rxhx
    @rxhx Před rokem +12

    Two questions though:
    1) Why does Graham's number finish at that satisfying number G64?
    2) Why/how do we know its last digits but not the first??

    • @Machame08
      @Machame08 Před rokem +2

      Given the hidden synchronicities prevalent in math I think it would have almost seemed stranger for it to finish at some arbitrary number

    • @Travvypattyy
      @Travvypattyy Před rokem +1

      Minecraf

    • @karlfeldlager7662
      @karlfeldlager7662 Před 5 měsíci

      ad 2) Take powers of two: They end in 2,4,8,6,2,4,8,6 .. but start with 2,4,8,1,3,6,1,2,5,1,2,4,8,1 .. . At the end we can compute "modulo", at the front not.

  • @IVAN3DX
    @IVAN3DX Před 8 lety +754

    2:38 Matt.exe had stopped working.

  • @turicaederynmab5343
    @turicaederynmab5343 Před 10 lety +359

    I've got such a headache after watching this, just thinking about a number with 1 digit larger makes my stomach hurt.

    • @chadcarl7554
      @chadcarl7554 Před 6 lety

      how ironic, my head hurts as well.

    • @ryan2-518
      @ryan2-518 Před 6 lety

      Suraj's opinion can die in a hole that's not ironic

    • @equilateraltriangle8619
      @equilateraltriangle8619 Před 6 lety +2

      This is an antidote (to end your life(no offense)) G64^^^^(G64^^^^G64xRayo’s number)^G64.

    • @davecrupel2817
      @davecrupel2817 Před 6 lety

      Stop thinking with your stomach 🤣

    • @jaredunrot717
      @jaredunrot717 Před 6 lety

      Sadly my mind has collapsed

  • @AceInAcademy
    @AceInAcademy Před 2 lety +6

    loved the explanation once again, hope to grasp the complete number in one go.

  • @professorgrimm4602
    @professorgrimm4602 Před rokem +1

    "The answer is between 11 and Graham's number"
    Wow thanks, that narrows it down so much. Any day now we'll have the precise answer.

  • @romanr9883
    @romanr9883 Před 8 lety +179

    "we pretty much nailed it, as far as im concerned" hrhrhr

  • @Infinite_Omniverse
    @Infinite_Omniverse Před 10 lety +108

    I used to be a mathematician like you, but then I took a Knuth's Up Arrow in the knee.

    • @blue9139
      @blue9139 Před 5 lety +1

      Oh no there are too many

    • @skair5425
      @skair5425 Před 5 lety +2

      A FELLOW SKRYIMMER

  • @claudioestevez1028
    @claudioestevez1028 Před 2 lety +3

    I just realized how precise all my mathematical answers have been. I've been nailing it all my life.

  • @firozfaroque7521
    @firozfaroque7521 Před 6 lety +2

    Your videos are informative it makes me fall in love with numbers again:) Thank you

  • @alexdabeast1892
    @alexdabeast1892 Před 8 lety +689

    (Graham's number)!

    • @horrorandgames
      @horrorandgames Před 8 lety +73

      I think you would need a computer with a nuclear reactor for computing power 😂

    • @alexdabeast1892
      @alexdabeast1892 Před 8 lety +2

      :D

    • @matthewdaws9877
      @matthewdaws9877 Před 8 lety +28

      +AlexDaBeast g64! ↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑ g64!

    • @GarryDumblowski
      @GarryDumblowski Před 8 lety +43

      +Wout Kops A nuclear reactor doesn't make any difference.
      It's just a power source.
      You could power any old computer with a nuclear reactor.

    • @TankleKlaus
      @TankleKlaus Před 8 lety +7

      +MrAlen61 How about (number of sub-atomic particles in the observable universe)! ^googolplex ?

  • @bastian_5975
    @bastian_5975 Před 9 lety +133

    Sum up this video in one sentence. Graham's number... IS OVER 9000!!!!

    • @coopergates9680
      @coopergates9680 Před 9 lety +9

      Bastian Jerome You mean (((9000!)!)!)!, or four consecutive factorials? Even that is less than g1 lollol

    • @bastian_5975
      @bastian_5975 Před 9 lety +4

      ok
      so I am correct In my asesment.

    • @coopergates9680
      @coopergates9680 Před 9 lety +1

      Bastian Jerome What game invented that phrase?

    • @bastian_5975
      @bastian_5975 Před 9 lety +1

      it wasn't a game, it was a man,and it was called Chuck Norris. He gave it to a show called Dragon Ball Z though. Goku had the line. someone asked what Goku's power level was when he went super saiyan and he responded "It's OVER 9000!!!"

    • @bastian_5975
      @bastian_5975 Před 9 lety

      ok it came from the show Dragon Ball-Z.

  • @regan3873
    @regan3873 Před 4 lety +5

    2:15 I love this dude’s handwriting

  • @as7river
    @as7river Před 2 lety +1

    Between 6 and G64.
    Matt: we've pretty much nailed it.
    That's a big nail, Matt.

  • @T0rche
    @T0rche Před 10 lety +90

    Graham's Number ↑↑↑↑↑↑Graham's Number worth of arrows↑↑↑↑↑↑ Graham's Number

  • @grainfrizz
    @grainfrizz Před 10 lety +47

    Infinity is larger than Grahams number but infinity is for sissies.

  • @PC_Simo
    @PC_Simo Před rokem +1

    Donald Knuth: ”How many arrows do you want?”
    Ron Graham: ”Yes.”

  • @alexanderhuber5830
    @alexanderhuber5830 Před 7 lety +1

    "We are narrowing in" - I love this british sense of humour; keep going guys-

  • @methanbreather
    @methanbreather Před 10 lety +42

    things like this happen when you don't keep your mathemathicans busy.

  • @Lordidude
    @Lordidude Před 8 lety +104

    Gra'ms Noombah

  • @subscribefornoreason542
    @subscribefornoreason542 Před 5 lety +8

    Here's a bigger number-
    Behold...G65
    Now I just need recognition

  • @pcarlisi
    @pcarlisi Před 4 lety +1

    July 8 2020, RIP Ron Graham, the big number man...

  • @GarrettBorden
    @GarrettBorden Před 7 lety +247

    It's crazy how incomprehensible Graham's number is. It's a shame that some people can't grasp it. "Is a googolplex bigger?" Lol. G1 dwarfs googolplex. Like it's not even comparable. And G2 is exponentially larger than G1. And so on. G63 might as well be "1" compared to G64! It's just mind boggling but I love this stuff. I started watching stuff on horizontal arrow notation and it's just ridiculous how quickly numbers start growing!

    • @sebastianschon3141
      @sebastianschon3141 Před 6 lety +39

      And then realize that this number - Grahams number - Is ridiculously small - compared to G65.

    • @danielw.4876
      @danielw.4876 Před 6 lety +28

      If you walked a googolplex miles, and then you walked Graham's number miles, they would both feel like the same amount since your brain would have no way of remembering how long you had walked for.

    • @lindsaytang1017
      @lindsaytang1017 Před 5 lety +2

      G63 might as well be 0

    • @nsprphg
      @nsprphg Před 5 lety +1

      Are there more angles in a circle than G64?

    • @ZyphLegend
      @ZyphLegend Před 5 lety +23

      Honestly, saying that G2 is exponentially larger than G1 sounds like an understatement. I feel like we need a new word to describe the absolutely mind bobbling distance between the two.

  • @PhilBagels
    @PhilBagels Před 9 lety +248

    I know the digits of Graham's number in base 3. They are 10000000...0000000.

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels Před 9 lety +29

      And while I'm at it. the digits in Graham's Number in base 27 are also 100000...00000. And the same is true in base 3^3^3 (~7.6 trillion), and in base 3^3^3^3, etc.

    • @erichernandez6102
      @erichernandez6102 Před 9 lety +126

      I know Graham's number in base Graham's number: It's 10.

    • @coopergates9680
      @coopergates9680 Před 9 lety +5

      Eric Hernandez That's nice, unless you attempt to write G2, G7, G33, etc, etc. in that base.

    • @zoranhacker
      @zoranhacker Před 9 lety +3

      Eric Hernandez umm isn't it 1?

    • @zoranhacker
      @zoranhacker Před 9 lety +12

      zoranhacker oh right, it's not lol

  • @yeetpathak639
    @yeetpathak639 Před rokem +2

    1:12 This Madlad explains one of the most difficult to grasp nos. ever conceptualised with facing a clothes shop

  • @amogus5902
    @amogus5902 Před 3 lety +20

    I once heard an analogy to describe grahams number, and it kinda helps me to wrap my head around it-
    If you filled the entire universe with digits the size of a Planck length (0.00000000000000000000000000000161255 meters) and in those digits were universes filled with Planck length digits, you would not have enough digits to represent Grahams number.
    For reference, there are 10^186 Planck lengths in the universe

    • @philip8498
      @philip8498 Před 2 lety +5

      i dont think you would have enough digits in there to describe G1 in there. let alone G64

    • @vedantsridhar8378
      @vedantsridhar8378 Před rokem +1

      @@philip8498 In fact there isn't even enough space to write down all the digits of 3^^^3! (^ stands for 'arrow'). There isn't even enough space to write down the number of digits in the number of digits. Even the number of digits in the number of digits in the number of digits. And you keep saying 'in the number of digits' 7.6 trillion times, before you get to a number which you can theoretically write down in our observable universe, because that number contains a few trillion digits.

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před rokem

      @@vedantsridhar8378 Indeed. Remember, 3↑↑4 contains 3.6 trillion digits (you'd need a whole library of books to be able to print this number in text), 3↑↑5 has a 3.6 trillion digit exponent (so already we can't describe the number of digits, as that number is more than the Planck volumes that could fit the Universe), and 3↑↑↑3 actually means 3↑↑(7.62 trillion). That's 7.62 trillion, not just 5.

  • @miklemikemuster
    @miklemikemuster Před 7 lety +25

    "pretty much nailed it". I love these guys.

  • @ckmishn3664
    @ckmishn3664 Před 7 lety +78

    Prof. Graham did a much better job of explaining the underlying problem directly than either Tony or Matt did with the "committee" analogy.

    • @greatwhitesufi
      @greatwhitesufi Před 7 lety +34

      Well, he made the number.

    • @tcocaine
      @tcocaine Před 7 lety

      he neither made the number nor explored it. Anyone can simply do this themselves..

    • @zoewells3160
      @zoewells3160 Před 2 lety +7

      @@tcocaine Well no nobody "makes numbers" but you know what they meant

    • @adamqazsedc
      @adamqazsedc Před 2 lety

      Agree

  • @hamedhosseini4938
    @hamedhosseini4938 Před 4 lety +13

    Mother: why don't you hang out with neighbors kid?
    Neihbors kid:

  • @eemikun
    @eemikun Před 4 lety +4

    8:48 Tony foreshadowing the TREE(3) video that came out five and a half years later!

  • @blazintitan277
    @blazintitan277 Před 10 lety +24

    Yup! We totally nailed it guys! Time for a coffee break!

  • @nuklearboysymbiote
    @nuklearboysymbiote Před 10 lety +805

    well nobody says it HAS to start with a 3. So... I started with a 1. And my brain didnt become a black hole because the end result (g64) is 1.

  • @haddenindustries2922
    @haddenindustries2922 Před 6 lety +9

    are you home between 7 a.m. and Graham's number?

  • @regan3873
    @regan3873 Před 4 lety +1

    My inability to comprehend this whole video is one of the many reasons I am not a mathematician.

  • @VaraNiN
    @VaraNiN Před 10 lety +243

    Is there a way how Graham got to this stupidly big number, or has he just made it up and said the anwer just can't be higher than this?

    • @DonSunsetAtDawn
      @DonSunsetAtDawn Před 10 lety +62

      He probably proved it.

    • @Maxuro
      @Maxuro Před 10 lety +21

      Man really... is this supposed to be a serious comment? Or you are just trying to be fun? Because you're looking more stupid than funny. You really think that exists a mathematical theorem proven by just saying "Hey MAN! i made up this PRECISE and EXACT number, i'm sure that the solution of this question is under this number MAN because WHATEVER MAAAAAN, IT'S COOL!"
      Seriously?

    • @VaraNiN
      @VaraNiN Před 10 lety +39

      Raumo
      Yes I am serious. Why cant Grahams Number be the same just with 4s or 2s or 5s or whaterver at the start? And why is it 64 times and not 63 or 65? I just don't see any way how you can come to such a gigantic number. Of course he had some theorys that said how large the number approx. has to be, but would it matter if I add or subtract 1? Or 2? Or a million? A trillion? A google? Or even a googleplex? Would this really change Grahams number in a way that it affects the whole theorem? That's what I meant to say with my original comment. But if you can explain to me why it starts with a 3 and has 64 iterations and that it WOULD matter if I would subtract 1 that's fine. I will be happy to accept it. (But please without starting to rage again, ok?)
      P.S: Our argument seems kinda' pointless, because I think someone has proven that the solution is between 13 and 2^^^6 (2 triple-arrow 6). Still a gigantic number but much, much, MUCH smaller than Graham's Number, I think we both can agree on that^^

    • @gocity9
      @gocity9 Před 10 lety +40

      obviously he proved it otherwise it wouldn't be so widely known.

    • @Timmoppy
      @Timmoppy Před 10 lety +1

      That was explained in the video as to how he got there..

  • @9RedJohn9
    @9RedJohn9 Před 9 lety +19

    7:20 "This is just AH" best part!

  • @jamessmith84240
    @jamessmith84240 Před 2 lety +1

    Can we take a moment to appreciate how lucky we are to have our human brains? I just realised we have the power conceive ideas larger than the universe we live in! Crazy stuff.

  • @l34052
    @l34052 Před 7 lety +53

    I'm really bad at maths, I mean really hopeless but I've been fascinated by grahams number since I first heard about it a few years ago.
    There's just something really intriguing and fascinating about large numbers and the maths behind them.
    This and quantum mechanics are the 2 things I'd most dearly love to understand in life.

    • @andreasdluffy1208
      @andreasdluffy1208 Před 4 lety +2

      Now dont hate me. But I think quantum physics is much more important then math. This type of math is kinda useless in my opinion

    • @abdulazis400
      @abdulazis400 Před 2 lety +6

      @@andreasdluffy1208 useless type of math WILL BE useful given enough time.

    • @dailybroccoli7538
      @dailybroccoli7538 Před 2 lety

      @@abdulazis400 and by those time, Quantum physics would have been printed in high school text books. Higher Maths is not useful period

    • @newwaveinfantry8362
      @newwaveinfantry8362 Před 2 lety +8

      You're really ignorant if you would generalize all of higher mathematics as useless.

    • @MABfan11
      @MABfan11 Před rokem

      @@abdulazis400 wonder what Googology will be useful for...

  • @wheresmyoldaccount
    @wheresmyoldaccount Před 9 lety +24

    Even plain old 2^64 -1 from the chessboard rice problem is a very large number (18 quintillion and something) to imagine.
    Once we get to 3↑↑↑3 , which is 3 with a power tree of 3's 7.6 trillion digits high... my brain gives in. 3↑↑↑3 is a number bigger than 10^3000000000000, whereas 10^80 accounts for the number of atoms in the known universe.
    And that number 3↑↑↑3 is way way way way beyond minuscule compared with 3↑↑↑↑3 (G1) which is way way way way way beyond minuscule compared with Graham's number.

    • @ecksdee9768
      @ecksdee9768 Před 2 lety +2

      and to think other numbers like TREE(3) and SSCG(3) make Graham's Number look like 0 in comparison really blows your mind on how big numbers can get

    • @hyrumleishman3624
      @hyrumleishman3624 Před 2 lety

      In conclusion: Numbers are ridiculous.

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před rokem

      Actually, 3↑↑5 is bigger than your 10^(large number) that you describe, since 3↑↑5 is bigger than googolplex.
      At least you can actually wrote down the full tower length of 3↑↑5 on a piece of paper. You can't do that with 3↑↑↑3 (3↑↑7.62 trillion).

  • @andrewbloom7694
    @andrewbloom7694 Před rokem +1

    5:15 "And all people appear in....I forget"
    Ah yes. The Parker Graham's Number Analogy

  • @nqnqnq
    @nqnqnq Před 2 lety +2

    "the number of digits needed to describe this number, you couldn't describe". imagine this quote nested on itself g63 (or g62, i guess) times. that would do justice to describe g64.

  • @bluey1328
    @bluey1328 Před 8 lety +262

    g64? dang even math trying to get in on that nintendo power...

  • @dragoncrystal24
    @dragoncrystal24 Před 10 lety +9

    Thanks for explaining this! Graham's number is now my new favourite number, and I can't wait to see what my math teacher initially thought about it (he's guaranteed to have heard about it before, he's a math addict)

  • @giansieger8687
    @giansieger8687 Před 6 lety +1

    a huge step😂😂. from 6-Graham‘s number to 11-Graham‘s number👏🏼👏🏼🔥😂

  • @jaggers7681
    @jaggers7681 Před 5 lety

    Grahams number is so freakin huge that no matter how small you write the number it would still be fit inside the observable universe

  • @michaelhartley6791
    @michaelhartley6791 Před 8 lety +55

    My year 11 class enjoyed this!!!

    • @Jiimys187
      @Jiimys187 Před 5 lety +1

      Michael Hartley but you’re not even a teacher

    • @d3generate804
      @d3generate804 Před 4 lety

      Have you graduated yet?

  • @mustafamkamel
    @mustafamkamel Před 10 lety +18

    One of the things I don't understand: why did Graham stop at g64? I think it's already proven that you can't even imagine how big a number it is, so why don't go higher that 64?
    Also, Why is it based on 3?

    • @Nebukanezzer
      @Nebukanezzer Před 6 lety +2

      Those questions you'd need to read his paper for.

    • @alexanderbrucegill8091
      @alexanderbrucegill8091 Před měsícem

      The reason is because g64 is not Somme randomly made number it’s the upper most awnser to a hyper dimensional cube problem and he made this notation too reperdant this

  • @MKD1101
    @MKD1101 Před 6 lety +61

    *I am already struggling to find g spot and now you want me to figure out g64 as well!!!!!!!*

  • @g07denslicer
    @g07denslicer Před 5 lety +7

    5:48 he was about to say hiker pubes.

  • @jagjitdusanjh8356
    @jagjitdusanjh8356 Před 10 lety +80

    What would be the final digit of Graham's Number in Base 12?

  • @dash0173
    @dash0173 Před 10 lety +187

    Oh and what do you get when you multiply Grahams number by Grahams numer?

  • @FatherManus
    @FatherManus Před rokem +1

    Imagine if you were immortal and you lived to be a Grahams number of years old. Now imagine realizing that compared to the infinite years ahead you are essentially still at year 1.

  • @___CANNIBAL___
    @___CANNIBAL___ Před 2 měsíci

    "How many sets you have left on the machine?"
    Me: "Between 1 and Graham's number of sets"

  • @dash0173
    @dash0173 Před 10 lety +8

    After a while, numbers just get to be scary...

  • @TheAed38
    @TheAed38 Před 10 lety +4

    The crazy thing is that as Carl Sagan puts it "A googolplex is precisely as far from infinity as is the number 1." As big as it is, the same thing goes for Graham's number.

  • @rohitpaul805
    @rohitpaul805 Před 2 lety

    The simple fact that talking about numbers like the G64, TREE(3) or Rayo's number, it makes me feel that how close we are getting to infinity, but then it comes to my mind that G64, TREE(3) or Rayo's number is 0.000....infinite zeroes...1% of infinity. These things are beyond the levels of human cognition but I love it

  • @mikefitzgerald41
    @mikefitzgerald41 Před 2 lety +1

    If you took Graham’s number to the power of Graham’s number - it it’s no closer to infinity than 0 is

  • @trentedwards6444
    @trentedwards6444 Před 10 lety +28

    I actually thought about something like this during class the other day, I was seeing the highest number I could get on the calculator with the least number of digits. This was how I did it ^-^

  • @dtripakis
    @dtripakis Před 10 lety +22

    I always thought the largest meaningful number was the number of atoms/electrons/whatever, in the whole universe. I was so wrong!

  • @youregonnaletityeetyouaway2882

    fun fact: g(64) wasn't the number in grahams original paper, the original upper bound was actually much lower than that but martin gardner used g(64) to make it easier to explain so he could popularise it. the upper bound is now even lower (i think 2^^2^^2^^9?) and the lower bound has also changed to 13

    • @finmat95
      @finmat95 Před 11 měsíci

      from 11 to 13? that's a huge improvement!

    • @MABfan11
      @MABfan11 Před 9 měsíci

      the original number is roughly equal to G(7), which is why it has got the nickname Little Graham in the Googology community

  • @life42theuniverse
    @life42theuniverse Před 2 lety +1

    Graham’s number has a single prime factor, 3. Graham’s number + 1 is even.

  • @scaper8
    @scaper8 Před 9 lety +6

    I once heard in regards to Graham's Number, that there are more digits in it in standard notation than there are estimated protons in the universe.
    Fantastic, fascinating, and fabulous!

    • @coopergates9680
      @coopergates9680 Před 9 lety +2

      scaper8 You only need 3↑↑↑4 to do that, lolz

  • @jfb-
    @jfb- Před 10 lety +65

    And what happens when you take g(graham's number) and apply the Ackerman function to it?

    • @electroflame6188
      @electroflame6188 Před 7 lety +11

      +IdontHaveAnyGoodNameIdeasButIHaveATaco
      You have no idea what the Ackerman function is, do you?

    • @arkues1161
      @arkues1161 Před 7 lety +4

      jfb-1337 your just a kid thay thinks he learned something cool but doesn't actually gets it

    • @halo4224
      @halo4224 Před 6 lety

      it's still smaller than g_65

    • @delrasshial7200
      @delrasshial7200 Před 5 lety

      You fuckers

    • @GirGir183
      @GirGir183 Před 5 lety

      You get sued by Ackerman.

  • @scottsterner4091
    @scottsterner4091 Před 2 lety

    my favorite thing about graham’s number is that, despite how ridiculously unfathomably massive all of the operations required to arrive at graham’s number may be, none of those operations increase by as much as just multiplying graham’s number by 2

  • @NeemeVaino
    @NeemeVaino Před 5 lety +19

    Explaining this to kids: Forget about g64, let's talk g1, the 3↑↑↑↑3:
    Smallest thing that can theoretically have any meaning is Planck length cube, largest meaningful volume is observable Universe. How much could one contain others? Well, something less than googol², not even googolplex that is 10^googol. So, googolplex is a nice number that we can tell how big it is - it has googol digits. About g1 we cannot do that. We cannot even tell how big is the number that tells how big it is. If we start to ask how big is the number that tells how big is the number that tells how big is the number ... so on, for how long? We cannot tell how long. How big is the number that tells how long it takes? No. How big is the number that tells how big is the number that tells... ... how long it takes. Still no. We cannot tell that. Meaning of words do not last that long. That's just g1, kids.

  • @JMari_Pex
    @JMari_Pex Před 10 lety +7

    8:39
    hahahahahahah that crack me up
    we pretty much nailed it hahahhahahah