General Question

simone54's avatar

Is there a centillion of anything?

Asked by simone54 (7629points) January 27th, 2014
3 responses
“Great Question” (2points)

I believe the highest number ever thought of was a centillion (without considering googolplex). That’s a one with 303 zeros behind it. My question; is there any proof that there is actually one centillion of anything in the universe?

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XOIIO's avatar

electrons, protons, neutrons, any sub atomic particle most likely, but we don’t have an efficient way to count and check.

I’ve thought of a new number, with 304 zeros behind it, I call it an XOIIOlion.

hearkat's avatar

Mosquitos or ants or other tiny critters.

PhiNotPi's avatar

No, there is not.

The smallest possible measure of volume is called the Planck volume. This comes from some kind of advanced physics. The Planck volume is about 4×10^-105 cubic meters.

The upper bound on the size of the universe is about 1×10^113 cubic meters.

So, there are about 2.5×10^217 Planck volumes in the universe. What this means is that no object (even if it is as small as allowed by the laws of physics) can fit in the universe 10^303 times.

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