Как пишется квинтиллион цифрами

Названия больших чисел

Существует десять цифр: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Числа состоят из цифр. Число 52 состоит из двух цифр: 5 и 2. Числа с 1 впереди и последующими нулями имеют названия. Всем известны: 10 — десять, 100 — сто, 1000 — тысяча, 1 000 000 — миллион. Так как большие числа с большим числом нулей записывать неудобно, используют сокращения в виде степеней: запись 1011 означает число с 11-ю нулями, запись 1052 означает число с 52-мя нулями и т.д. Приведем названия чисел с десятками и сотнями нулей.

Названия «круглых» чисел, которые можно встретить в школьной программе:
1 000 000 — миллион (6 нулей)
1 000 000 000 — миллиард или биллион (9 нулей)
1 000 000 000 000 — триллион (12 нулей)
1 000 000 000 000 000 — квадриллион (15 нулей)
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 — квинтиллион (18 нулей)
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 — секстиллион (21 нуль)
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 — септиллион (24 нуля)
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 — октиллион (27 нулей)
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 — нониллион (30 нулей)
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 — дециллион (33 нуля)

Еще некоторые примеры интересных названий:
10100 — гугол, googol (100 нулей)
1010100 — гуголплекс, googolplex (десять в степени гугол)
10140 — асанкхейя, asankhyeya или сто квинквадрагинтиллионов
10303 — центиллион, centillion
103003 — миллиллион, millillion
103000003 — милли-миллиллион, milli-millillion

Самого большого числа в мире не существует, так как любое большое число всегда можно увеличить, умножить, возвести в степень, и получится другое большее число. Бесконечность не является числом.

Из известных самых больших чисел, имеющих название (математическое доказательство) можно выделить: число TREE(3), число SCG(13), число Лоудера, число Мозера, число Скьюза, число Райо, число Грэма, инфитеиплеон.

Таблица больших чисел с указанием количества нулей и названиями на русском и английском.

Число нулей Краткая запись Название Название на английском
3 103 тысяча thousand
6 106 миллион million
9 109 миллиард (биллион) billion
12 1012 триллион trillion
15 1015 квадриллион quadrillion
18 1018 квинтиллион quintillion
21 1021 секстиллион sextillion
24 1024 септиллион septillion
27 1027 октиллион octillion
30 1030 нониллион nonillion
33 1033 дециллион decillion
36 1036 ундециллион undecillion
39 1039 дуодециллион duodecillion
42 1042 тредециллион tredecillion
45 1045 кватуордециллион quattuordecillion
48 1048 квиндециллион quindecillion
51 1051 сексдециллион sexdecillion
54 1054 септендециллион septendecillion
57 1057 октодециллион octodecillion
60 1060 новемдециллион novemdecillion
63 1063 вигинтиллион vigintillion
66 1066 унвигинтиллион unvigintillion
69 1069 дуовигинтиллион duovigintillion
72 1072 тревигинтиллион trevigintillion
75 1075 кватуорвигинтиллион quattuorvigintillion
78 1078 квинвигинтиллион quinvigintillion
81 1081 сексвигинтиллион sexvigintillion
84 1084 септенвигинтиллион septenvigintillion
87 1087 октовигинтиллион octovigintillion
90 1090 новемвигинтиллион novemvigintillion
93 1093 тригинтиллион trigintillion
96 1096 унтригинтиллион untrigintillion
99 1099 дуотригинтиллион duotrigintillion
102 10102 третригинтиллион trestrigintillion
105 10105 кватортригинтиллион quattuortrigintillion
108 10108 квинтригинтиллион quintrigintillion
111 10111 секстригинтиллион sextrigintillion
114 10114 септентригинтиллион septentrigintillion
117 10117 октотригинтиллион octotrigintillion
120 10120 новемтригинтиллион novemtrigintillion
123 10123 квадрагинтиллион quadragintillion
126 10126 унквадрагинтиллион unquadragintillion
129 10129 дуоквадрагинтиллион duoquadragintillion
132 10132 треквадрагинтиллион trequadragintillion
135 10135 кваторквадрагинтиллион quattuorquadragintillion
138 10138 квинквадрагинтиллион quinquadragintillion
141 10141 сексквадрагинтиллион sexquadragintillion
144 10144 септенквадрагинтиллион septenquadragintillion
147 10147 октоквадрагинтиллион octoquadragintillion
150 10150 новемквадрагинтиллион novemquadragintillion
153 10153 квинквагинтиллион quinquagintillion
156 10156 унквинкагинтиллион unquinquagintillion
159 10159 дуоквинкагинтиллион duoquinquagintillion
162 10162 треквинкагинтиллион trequinquagintillion
165 10165 кваторквинкагинтиллион quattuorquinquagintillion
168 10168 квинквинкагинтиллион quinquinquagintillion
171 10171 сексквинкагинтиллион sexquinquagintillion
174 10174 септенквинкагинтиллион septenquinquagintillion
177 10177 октоквинкагинтиллион octoquinquagintillion
180 10180 новемквинкагинтиллион novemquinquagintillion
183 10183 сексагинтиллион sexagintillion
186 10186 унсексагинтиллион unsexagintillion
189 10189 дуосексагинтиллион duosexagintillion
192 10192 тресексагинтиллион tresexagintillion
195 10195 кваторсексагинтиллион quattuorsexagintillion
198 10198 квинсексагинтиллион quinsexagintillion
201 10201 секссексагинтиллион sexsexagintillion
204 10204 септенсексагинтиллион septensexagintillion
207 10207 октосексагинтиллион octosexagintillion
210 10210 новемсексагинтиллион novemsexagintillion
213 10213 септагинтиллион septuagintillion
216 10216 унсептагинтиллион unseptuagintillion
219 10219 дуосептагинтиллион duoseptuagintillion
222 10222 тресептагинтиллион treseptuagintillion
225 10225 кваторсептагинтиллион quattuorseptuagintillion
228 10228 квинсептагинтиллион quinseptuagintillion
231 10231 секссептагинтиллион sexseptuagintillion
234 10234 септенсептагинтиллион septenseptuagintillion
237 10237 октосептагинтиллион octoseptuagintillion
240 10240 новемсептагинтиллион novemseptuagintillion
243 10243 октогинтиллион octogintillion
246 10246 уноктогинтиллион unoctogintillion
249 10249 дуооктогинтиллион duooctogintillion
252 10252 треоктогинтиллион treoctogintillion
255 10255 кватороктогинтиллион quattuoroctogintillion
258 10258 квиноктогинтиллион quinoctogintillion
261 10261 сексоктогинтиллион sexoctogintillion
264 10264 септоктогинтиллион septoctogintillion
267 10267 октооктогинтиллион octooctogintillion
270 10270 новемоктогинтиллион novemoctogintillion
273 10273 нонагинтиллион nonagintillion
276 10276 уннонагинтиллион unnonagintillion
279 10279 дуононагинтиллион duononagintillion
282 10282 тренонагинтиллион trenonagintillion
285 10285 кваторнонагинтиллион quattuornonagintillion
288 10288 квиннонагинтиллион quinnonagintillion
291 10291 секснонагинтиллион sexnonagintillion
294 10294 септеннонагинтиллион septennonagintillion
297 10297 октононагинтиллион octononagintillion
300 10300 новемнонагинтиллион novemnonagintillion
303 10303 центиллион centillion

Квинтиллион

Квинтиллион

Именные названия степеней тысячи в порядке возрастания

Название Значение
Американская
система
Европейская
система
тысяча 10³ 10³
миллион 106 106
миллиард 109 109
биллион 109 1012
триллион 1012 1018
квадриллион 1015 1024
квинтиллион 1018 1030
секстиллион 1021 1036
септиллион 1024 1042
октиллион 1027 1048
нониллион 1030 1054
дециллион 1033 1060

Произношение чисел, идущих далее, часто различается.

Название Значение
Американская
система
Европейская
система
ундециллион 1036 1066
додециллион 1039 1072
тредециллион 1042 1078
кваттуордециллион 1045 1084
квиндециллион 1048 1090
cедециллион 1051 1096
септдециллион 1054 10102
дуодевигинтиллион 1057 10108
ундевигинтиллион 1060 10114
вигинтиллион 1063 10120
анвигинтиллион 1066 10126
дуовигинтиллион 1069 10132
тревигинтиллион 1072 10138
кватторвигинтиллион 1075 10144
квинвигинтиллион 1078 10150
сексвигинтиллион 1081 10156
септемвигинтиллион 1084 10162
октовигинтиллион 1087 10168
новемвигинтиллион 1090 10174
тригинтиллион 1093 10180
антригинтиллион 1096 10186
гугол 10100 10100
новемдециллион 10114 10???
квадрагинтиллион 10123 10240
квинквагинтиллион 10153 10300
сексагинтиллион 10183 10360
септуагинтиллион 10213 10420
октогинтиллион 10243 10480
нонагинтиллион 10273 10540
центиллион 10303 10600

Дальнейшие названия могут быть получены либо прямым, либо обратным порядком латинских числительных (как правильно, не известно):

Название Значение
Американская
система
Европейская
система
анцентиллион или центуниллион 10306 10606
дуоцентиллион или центдуоллион 10309 10612
трецентиллион или центтриллион 10312 10618
кватторцентиллион или центквадриллион 10315 10624
третригинтацентиллион или центтретригинтиллион 10402 10798

Вероятнее всего, что наиболее правильным будет второй вариант написания, так как он более соответствует построению числительных в латинском языке и позволяет избежать двухсмысленностей (например в числе трецентиллион, которое по первому написанию является и 10903 и 10312).

Числа далее:

Название Значение
Американская
система
Европейская
система
дуцентиллион 10603 101200
трецентиллион 10903 101800
квадрингентиллион 101203 102400
квингентиллион 101503 103000
сесцентиллион 101803 103600
септингентиллион 102103 104200
окстингентиллион 102403 104800
нонгентиллион 102703 105400
миллиллион (или милиаиллион) 103003 106000
дуомилиаллион 106003 1012000
тремиллиаллион 109003 1018000
дуцентдуомилианонгентновемдециллион 10308760 10617514
милиамилиаиллион 103000003 106000000
дуомилиамилиаиллион 106000003 1012000000
гуголплекс 1010100 1010100
зиллион 103×n+3 106×n

См. также

  • Список чисел
  • Системы наименования чисел
  • Самое длинное слово немецкого языка

Числа с собственными именами

Вещественные Золотое сечение | e (число Эйлера) | Пи | Число Скьюза
Натуральные Чёртова дюжина | Число зверя | Число Рамануджана — Харди
Степени десяти Мириада | Гугол | Асанкхейя | Гуголплекс
Степени тысячи Тысяча | Миллион | Миллиард | Биллион | Триллион … | … Центиллион | Зиллион
Степени двенадцати Дюжина | Гросс | Масса
Литературные меры счёта Доцанд | Мириад

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2010.

Синонимы:

Полезное

Смотреть что такое «Квинтиллион» в других словарях:

  • КВИНТИЛЛИОН — (франц. quintillion) число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с 18 нулями, т. е. число 1018; в некоторых странах квинтиллион число 1030 …   Большой Энциклопедический словарь

  • квинтиллион — сущ., кол во синонимов: 1 • квинтильон (1) Словарь синонимов ASIS. В.Н. Тришин. 2013 …   Словарь синонимов

  • квинтиллион — (франц. quintillion), число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с 18 нулями, то есть число 1018; в некоторых странах квинтиллион  число 1030. * * * КВИНТИЛЛИОН КВИНТИЛЛИОН (франц. quintillion), число, изображаемое в десятичной записи… …   Энциклопедический словарь

  • квинтиллион — квинтильон (фр. quintillion) число, изображаемое единицей с 18 нулями, т. е. число 1018; в нек рых странах с 30 нулями. Новый словарь иностранных слов. by EdwART, , 2009. квинтиллион [фр. quintillion] – тысяча квадрильонов Большой словарь иностр …   Словарь иностранных слов русского языка

  • Квинтиллион — (франц. quintillion)         число, изображаемое единицей с 18 нулями, т. е. число 1018. Иногда К. называют число 1030 …   Большая советская энциклопедия

  • Квинтиллион — м. Число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с восемнадцатью нулями, а в некоторых странах с тридцатью нулями. Толковый словарь Ефремовой. Т. Ф. Ефремова. 2000 …   Современный толковый словарь русского языка Ефремовой

  • квинтиллион — квинтиллион, квинтиллионы, квинтиллиона, квинтиллионов, квинтиллиону, квинтиллионам, квинтиллион, квинтиллионы, квинтиллионом, квинтиллионами, квинтиллионе, квинтиллионах (Источник: «Полная акцентуированная парадигма по А. А. Зализняку») …   Формы слов

  • КВИНТИЛЛИОН — (франц. quintillion), число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с 18 нулями, т.е. число 1018; в нек рых странах К. число 1030 …   Естествознание. Энциклопедический словарь

  • квинтиллион — квинтилли он, а и квинтиль он, а …   Русский орфографический словарь

  • квинтиллион — квинтиллио/н и квинтильо/н (2 м); мн. квинтиллио/ны и квинтильо/ны, Р. квинтиллио/нов и квинтильо/нов …   Орфографический словарь русского языка

Толковый словарь русского языка. Поиск по слову, типу, синониму, антониму и описанию. Словарь ударений.

квинтиллион

ТОЛКОВЫЙ СЛОВАРЬ

м.

Число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с восемнадцатью нулями, а в некоторых странах — с тридцатью нулями.

ЭНЦИКЛОПЕДИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ

Квинтиллио́н (франц. quintillion), число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с 18 нулями, то есть число 1018; в некоторых странах квинтиллион — число 1030.

* * *

КВИНТИЛЛИОН — КВИНТИЛЛИО́Н (франц. quintillion), число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с 18 нулями, т. е. число 1018; в некоторых странах квинтиллион — число 1030.

БОЛЬШОЙ ЭНЦИКЛОПЕДИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ

КВИНТИЛЛИОН (франц. quintillion) — число, изображаемое в десятичной записи единицей с 18 нулями, т. е. число 1018; в некоторых странах квинтиллион — число 1030.

ОРФОГРАФИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ

квинтиллио́н, -а и квинтильо́н, -а

СЛОВАРЬ УДАРЕНИЙ

квинтиллио́н и квинтильо́н [льё]

ФОРМЫ СЛОВ

квинтиллио́н, квинтиллио́ны, квинтиллио́на, квинтиллио́нов, квинтиллио́ну, квинтиллио́нам, квинтиллио́ном, квинтиллио́нами, квинтиллио́не, квинтиллио́нах

СИНОНИМЫ

сущ., кол-во синонимов: 1

ГРАММАТИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ

квинтиллио́н м 1a [//квинтильо́н]

НОВЫЙ СЛОВАРЬ ИНОСТРАННЫХ СЛОВ

квинтиллио́н

— , квинтильон (фр. quintillion) число, изображаемое единицей с 18 нулями, т. е. число 1018; в нек-рых странах — с 30 нулями.

СКАНВОРДЫ

ПОЛЕЗНЫЕ СЕРВИСЫ

квинтиллиони квинтильон

МОРФЕМНО-ОРФОГРАФИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ

квинт/иллио́н/и квинт/ильо́н/.

ПОЛЕЗНЫЕ СЕРВИСЫ

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    Смотрите также

    Миллион Миллиард Квадриллион Секстиллион Конвертеры
    Число прописью Системы счисления Распределение чисел Перевод чисел Выгодность пиццы

    Two naming scales for large numbers have been used in English and other European languages since the early modern era: the long and short scales. Most English variants use the short scale today, but the long scale remains dominant in many non-English-speaking areas, including continental Europe and Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America. These naming procedures are based on taking the number n occurring in 103n+3 (short scale) or 106n (long scale) and concatenating Latin roots for its units, tens, and hundreds place, together with the suffix -illion.

    Names of numbers above a trillion are rarely used in practice; such large numbers have practical usage primarily in the scientific domain, where powers of ten are expressed as 10 with a numeric superscript.

    Indian English does not use millions, but has its own system of large numbers including lakhs and crores.[1] English also has many words, such as «zillion», used informally to mean large but unspecified amounts; see indefinite and fictitious numbers.

    Standard dictionary numbers

    x Name
    (SS/LS, LS)
    SS
    (103x+3)
    LS
    (106x, 106x+3)
    Authorities
    AHD4[2] CED[3] COD[4] OED2[5] OEDweb[6] RHD2[7] SOED3[8] W3[9] HM[10]
    1 Million 106 106
    Milliard 109
    2 Billion 109 1012
    3 Trillion 1012 1018
    4 Quadrillion 1015 1024
    5 Quintillion 1018 1030  
    6 Sextillion 1021 1036  
    7 Septillion 1024 1042  
    8 Octillion 1027 1048  
    9 Nonillion 1030 1054  
    10 Decillion 1033 1060  
    11 Undecillion 1036 1066        
    12 Duodecillion 1039 1072        
    13 Tredecillion 1042 1078        
    14 Quattuordecillion 1045 1084        
    15 Quindecillion 1048 1090        
    16 Sexdecillion 1051 1096        
    17 Septendecillion 1054 10102        
    18 Octodecillion 1057 10108        
    19 Novemdecillion 1060 10114        
    20 Vigintillion 1063 10120  
    100 Centillion 10303 10600      

    Usage:

    • Short scale: US, English Canada, modern British, Australia, and Eastern Europe
    • Long scale: French Canada, older British, Western & Central Europe

    Apart from million, the words in this list ending with —illion are all derived by adding prefixes (bi-, tri-, etc., derived from Latin) to the stem —illion.[11] Centillion[12] appears to be the highest name ending in -«illion» that is included in these dictionaries. Trigintillion, often cited as a word in discussions of names of large numbers, is not included in any of them, nor are any of the names that can easily be created by extending the naming pattern (unvigintillion, duovigintillion, duo­quinqua­gint­illion, etc.).

    Name Value Authorities
    AHD4 CED COD OED2 OEDnew RHD2 SOED3 W3 UM
    Googol 10100
    Googolplex 10googol (1010100)

    All of the dictionaries included googol and googolplex, generally crediting it to the Kasner and Newman book and to Kasner’s nephew (see below). None include any higher names in the googol family (googolduplex, etc.). The Oxford English Dictionary comments that googol and googolplex are «not in formal mathematical use».

    Usage of names of large numbers

    Some names of large numbers, such as million, billion, and trillion, have real referents in human experience, and are encountered in many contexts. At times, the names of large numbers have been forced into common usage as a result of hyperinflation. The highest numerical value banknote ever printed was a note for 1 sextillion pengő (1021 or 1 milliard bilpengő as printed) printed in Hungary in 1946. In 2009, Zimbabwe printed a 100 trillion (1014) Zimbabwean dollar note, which at the time of printing was worth about US$30.[13]

    Names of larger numbers, however, have a tenuous, artificial existence, rarely found outside definitions, lists, and discussions of how large numbers are named. Even well-established names like sextillion are rarely used, since in the context of science, including astronomy, where such large numbers often occur, they are nearly always written using scientific notation. In this notation, powers of ten are expressed as 10 with a numeric superscript, e.g. «The X-ray emission of the radio galaxy is 1.3×1045 joules.» When a number such as 1045 needs to be referred to in words, it is simply read out as «ten to the forty-fifth». This is easier to say and less ambiguous than «quattuordecillion», which means something different in the long scale and the short scale.

    When a number represents a quantity rather than a count, SI prefixes can be used—thus «femtosecond», not «one quadrillionth of a second»—although often powers of ten are used instead of some of the very high and very low prefixes. In some cases, specialized units are used, such as the astronomer’s parsec and light year or the particle physicist’s barn.

    Nevertheless, large numbers have an intellectual fascination and are of mathematical interest, and giving them names is one way people try to conceptualize and understand them.

    One of the earliest examples of this is The Sand Reckoner, in which Archimedes gave a system for naming large numbers. To do this, he called the numbers up to a myriad myriad (108) «first numbers» and called 108 itself the «unit of the second numbers». Multiples of this unit then became the second numbers, up to this unit taken a myriad myriad times, 108·108=1016. This became the «unit of the third numbers», whose multiples were the third numbers, and so on. Archimedes continued naming numbers in this way up to a myriad myriad times the unit of the 108-th numbers, i.e. (10^{8})^{(10^{8})}=10^{8cdot 10^{8}}, and embedded this construction within another copy of itself to produce names for numbers up to {displaystyle ((10^{8})^{(10^{8})})^{(10^{8})}=10^{8cdot 10^{16}}.} Archimedes then estimated the number of grains of sand that would be required to fill the known universe, and found that it was no more than «one thousand myriad of the eighth numbers» (1063).

    Since then, many others have engaged in the pursuit of conceptualizing and naming numbers that have no existence outside the imagination. One motivation for such a pursuit is that attributed to the inventor of the word googol, who was certain that any finite number «had to have a name». Another possible motivation is competition between students in computer programming courses, where a common exercise is that of writing a program to output numbers in the form of English words.[citation needed]

    Most names proposed for large numbers belong to systematic schemes which are extensible. Thus, many names for large numbers are simply the result of following a naming system to its logical conclusion—or extending it further.[citation needed]

    Origins of the «standard dictionary numbers»

    Chuquet.gif

    The words bymillion and trimillion were first recorded in 1475 in a manuscript of Jehan Adam. Subsequently, Nicolas Chuquet wrote a book Triparty en la science des nombres which was not published during Chuquet’s lifetime. However, most of it was copied by Estienne de La Roche for a portion of his 1520 book, L’arismetique. Chuquet’s book contains a passage in which he shows a large number marked off into groups of six digits, with the comment:

    Ou qui veult le premier point peult signiffier million Le second point byllion Le tiers point tryllion Le quart quadrillion Le cinqe quyllion Le sixe sixlion Le sept.e septyllion Le huyte ottyllion Le neufe nonyllion et ainsi des ault’s se plus oultre on vouloit preceder

    (Or if you prefer the first mark can signify million, the second mark byllion, the third mark tryllion, the fourth quadrillion, the fifth quyillion, the sixth sixlion, the seventh septyllion, the eighth ottyllion, the ninth nonyllion and so on with others as far as you wish to go).

    Adam and Chuquet used the long scale of powers of a million; that is, Adam’s bymillion (Chuquet’s byllion) denoted 1012, and Adam’s trimillion (Chuquet’s tryllion) denoted 1018.

    The googol family

    The names googol and googolplex were invented by Edward Kasner’s nephew Milton Sirotta and introduced in Kasner and Newman’s 1940 book Mathematics and the Imagination[14] in the following passage:

    The name «googol» was invented by a child (Dr. Kasner’s nine-year-old nephew) who was asked to think up a name for a very big number, namely 1 with one hundred zeroes after it. He was very certain that this number was not infinite, and therefore equally certain that it had to have a name. At the same time that he suggested «googol» he gave a name for a still larger number: «googolplex.» A googolplex is much larger than a googol, but is still finite, as the inventor of the name was quick to point out. It was first suggested that a googolplex should be 1, followed by writing zeros until you got tired. This is a description of what would happen if one tried to write a googolplex, but different people get tired at different times and it would never do to have Carnera a better mathematician than Dr. Einstein, simply because he had more endurance. The googolplex is, then, a specific finite number, equal to 1 with a googol zeros after it.

    Value Name Authority
    10100 Googol Kasner and Newman, dictionaries (see above)
    10googol = 1010100 Googolplex Kasner and Newman, dictionaries (see above)

    John Horton Conway and Richard K. Guy[15] have suggested that N-plex be used as a name for 10N. This gives rise to the name googolplexplex for 10googolplex = 101010100. Conway and Guy[15] have proposed that N-minex be used as a name for 10−N, giving rise to the name googolminex for the reciprocal of a googolplex, which is written as 10-(10100). None of these names are in wide use.

    The names googol and googolplex inspired the name of the Internet company Google and its corporate headquarters, the Googleplex, respectively.

    Extensions of the standard dictionary numbers

    This section illustrates several systems for naming large numbers, and shows how they can be extended past vigintillion.

    Traditional British usage assigned new names for each power of one million (the long scale): 1,000,000 = 1 million; 1,000,0002 = 1 billion; 1,000,0003 = 1 trillion; and so on. It was adapted from French usage, and is similar to the system that was documented or invented by Chuquet.

    Traditional American usage (which was also adapted from French usage but at a later date), Canadian, and modern British usage assign new names for each power of one thousand (the short scale.) Thus, a billion is 1000 × 10002 = 109; a trillion is 1000 × 10003 = 1012; and so forth. Due to its dominance in the financial world (and by the US dollar), this was adopted for official United Nations documents.

    Traditional French usage has varied; in 1948, France, which had originally popularized the short scale worldwide, reverted to the long scale.

    The term milliard is unambiguous and always means 109. It is seldom seen in American usage and rarely in British usage, but frequently in continental European usage. The term is sometimes attributed to French mathematician Jacques Peletier du Mans circa 1550 (for this reason, the long scale is also known as the Chuquet-Peletier system), but the Oxford English Dictionary states that the term derives from post-Classical Latin term milliartum, which became milliare and then milliart and finally our modern term.

    Concerning names ending in -illiard for numbers 106n+3, milliard is certainly in widespread use in languages other than English, but the degree of actual use of the larger terms is questionable. The terms «Milliarde» in German, «miljard» in Dutch, «milyar» in Turkish, and «миллиард,» milliard (transliterated) in Russian, are standard usage when discussing financial topics.

    For additional details, see billion and long and short scale.

    The naming procedure for large numbers is based on taking the number n occurring in 103n+3 (short scale) or 106n (long scale) and concatenating Latin roots for its units, tens, and hundreds place, together with the suffix -illion. In this way, numbers up to 103·999+3 = 103000 (short scale) or 106·999 = 105994 (long scale) may be named. The choice of roots and the concatenation procedure is that of the standard dictionary numbers if n is 9 or smaller. For larger n (between 10 and 999), prefixes can be constructed based on a system described by Conway and Guy.[15] Today, sexdecillion and novemdecillion are standard dictionary numbers and, using the same reasoning as Conway and Guy did for the numbers up to nonillion, could probably be used to form acceptable prefixes. The Conway–Guy system for forming prefixes:

    Units Tens Hundreds
    1 Un N Deci NX Centi
    2 Duo MS Viginti N Ducenti
    3 Tre (*) NS Triginta NS Trecenti
    4 Quattuor NS Quadraginta NS Quadringenti
    5 Quinqua NS Quinquaginta NS Quingenti
    6 Se (*) N Sexaginta N Sescenti
    7 Septe (*) N Septuaginta N Septingenti
    8 Octo MX Octoginta MX Octingenti
    9 Nove (*) Nonaginta Nongenti
    (*) ^ When preceding a component marked S or X, «tre» changes to «tres» and «se» to «ses» or «sex»; similarly, when preceding a component marked M or N, «septe» and «nove» change to «septem» and «novem» or «septen» and «noven».

    Since the system of using Latin prefixes will become ambiguous for numbers with exponents of a size which the Romans rarely counted to, like 106,000,258, Conway and Guy co-devised with Allan Wechsler the following set of consistent conventions that permit, in principle, the extension of this system indefinitely to provide English short-scale names for any integer whatsoever.[15] The name of a number 103n+3, where n is greater than or equal to 1000, is formed by concatenating the names of the numbers of the form 103m+3, where m represents each group of comma-separated digits of n, with each but the last «-illion» trimmed to «-illi-«, or, in the case of m = 0, either «-nilli-» or «-nillion».[15] For example, 103,000,012, the 1,000,003rd «-illion» number, equals one «millinillitrillion»; 1033,002,010,111, the 11,000,670,036th «-illion» number, equals one «undecillinilli­septua­ginta­ses­centilli­sestrigint­illion»; and 1029,629,629,633, the 9,876,543,210th «-illion» number, equals one «nonillise­septua­ginta­octingentillitres­quadra­ginta­quingentillideciducent­illion».[15]

    The following table shows number names generated by the system described by Conway and Guy for the short and long scales.[16]

    Base -illion
    (short scale)
    Base -illion
    (long scale)
    Value US, Canada and modern British
    (short scale)
    Traditional British
    (long scale)
    Traditional European (Peletier)
    (long scale)
    SI
    Symbol
    SI
    Prefix
    1 1 106 Million Million Million M Mega-
    2 1 109 Billion Thousand million Milliard G Giga-
    3 2 1012 Trillion Billion Billion T Tera-
    4 2 1015 Quadrillion Thousand billion Billiard P Peta-
    5 3 1018 Quintillion Trillion Trillion E Exa-
    6 3 1021 Sextillion Thousand trillion Trilliard Z Zetta-
    7 4 1024 Septillion Quadrillion Quadrillion Y Yotta-
    8 4 1027 Octillion Thousand quadrillion Quadrilliard R Ronna-
    9 5 1030 Nonillion Quintillion Quintillion Q Quetta-
    10 5 1033 Decillion Thousand quintillion Quintilliard
    11 6 1036 Undecillion Sextillion Sextillion
    12 6 1039 Duodecillion Thousand sextillion Sextilliard
    13 7 1042 Tredecillion Septillion Septillion
    14 7 1045 Quattuordecillion Thousand septillion Septilliard
    15 8 1048 Quindecillion Octillion Octillion
    16 8 1051 Sedecillion Thousand octillion Octilliard
    17 9 1054 Septendecillion Nonillion Nonillion
    18 9 1057 Octodecillion Thousand nonillion Nonilliard
    19 10 1060 Novendecillion Decillion Decillion
    20 10 1063 Vigintillion Thousand decillion Decilliard
    21 11 1066 Unvigintillion Undecillion Undecillion
    22 11 1069 Duovigintillion Thousand undecillion Undecilliard
    23 12 1072 Tresvigintillion Duodecillion Duodecillion
    24 12 1075 Quattuor­vigint­illion Thousand duodecillion Duodecilliard
    25 13 1078 Quinvigintillion Tredecillion Tredecillion
    26 13 1081 Sesvigintillion Thousand tredecillion Tredecilliard
    27 14 1084 Septemvigintillion Quattuordecillion Quattuordecillion
    28 14 1087 Octovigintillion Thousand quattuordecillion Quattuordecilliard
    29 15 1090 Novemvigintillion Quindecillion Quindecillion
    30 15 1093 Trigintillion Thousand quindecillion Quindecilliard
    31 16 1096 Untrigintillion Sedecillion Sedecillion
    32 16 1099 Duotrigintillion Thousand sedecillion Sedecilliard
    33 17 10102 Trestrigintillion Septendecillion Septendecillion
    34 17 10105 Quattuor­trigint­illion Thousand septendecillion Septendecilliard
    35 18 10108 Quintrigintillion Octodecillion Octodecillion
    36 18 10111 Sestrigintillion Thousand octodecillion Octodecilliard
    37 19 10114 Septentrigintillion Novendecillion Novendecillion
    38 19 10117 Octotrigintillion Thousand novendecillion Novendecilliard
    39 20 10120 Noventrigintillion Vigintillion Vigintillion
    40 20 10123 Quadragintillion Thousand vigintillion Vigintilliard
    50 25 10153 Quinquagintillion Thousand quinvigintillion Quinvigintilliard
    60 30 10183 Sexagintillion Thousand trigintillion Trigintilliard
    70 35 10213 Septuagintillion Thousand quintrigintillion Quintrigintilliard
    80 40 10243 Octogintillion Thousand quadragintillion Quadragintilliard
    90 45 10273 Nonagintillion Thousand quin­quadra­gint­illion Quin­quadra­gint­illiard
    100 50 10303 Centillion Thousand quinquagintillion Quinquagintilliard
    101 51 10306 Uncentillion Unquinquagintillion Unquinquagintillion
    110 55 10333 Decicentillion Thousand quin­quinqua­gint­illion Quin­quinqua­gint­illiard
    111 56 10336 Undecicentillion Ses­quinqua­gint­illion Ses­quinqua­gint­illion
    120 60 10363 Viginticentillion Thousand sexagintillion Sexagintilliard
    121 61 10366 Unviginticentillion Unsexagintillion Unsexagintillion
    130 65 10393 Trigintacentillion Thousand quinsexagintillion Quinsexagintilliard
    140 70 10423 Quadra­gintacent­illion Thousand septuagintillion Septuagintilliard
    150 75 10453 Quinqua­gintacent­illion Thousand quin­septua­gint­illion Quin­septua­gint­illiard
    160 80 10483 Sexagintacentillion Thousand octogintillion Octogintilliard
    170 85 10513 Septuagintacentillion Thousand quinoctogintillion Quinoctogintilliard
    180 90 10543 Octogintacentillion Thousand nonagintillion Nonagintilliard
    190 95 10573 Nonagintacentillion Thousand quinnonagintillion Quinnonagintilliard
    200 100 10603 Ducentillion Thousand centillion Centilliard
    300 150 10903 Trecentillion Thousand quinqua­gintacent­illion Quinqua­gintacent­illiard
    400 200 101203 Quadringentillion Thousand ducentillion Ducentilliard
    500 250 101503 Quingentillion Thousand quinqua­gintaducent­illion Quinqua­gintaducent­illiard
    600 300 101803 Sescentillion Thousand trecentillion Trecentilliard
    700 350 102103 Septingentillion Thousand quinqua­gintatrecent­illion Quinqua­gintatrecent­illiard
    800 400 102403 Octingentillion Thousand quadringentillion Quadringentilliard
    900 450 102703 Nongentillion Thousand quinqua­ginta­quadringent­illion Quinqua­ginta­quadringent­illiard
    1000 500 103003 Millillion (alt. millinillion)[17] Thousand quingentillion Quingentilliard
    Value Name Equivalent
    US, Canadian and modern British
    (short scale)
    Traditional British
    (long scale)
    Traditional European (Peletier)
    (long scale)
    10100 Googol Ten duotrigintillion Ten thousand sedecillion Ten sedecilliard
    1010100 Googolplex [1] Ten trillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilliduotrigintatre­centillion [2] Ten thousand milli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentillion [2] Ten milli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexaginta­sescentilliard
    ^[1] Googolplex’s short scale name is derived from it equal to ten of the 3,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​332nd «-illion»s (This is the value of n when 10 X 10(3n + 3) = 1010100)
    ^[2] Googolplex’s long scale name (both traditional British and traditional European) is derived from it being equal to ten thousand of the 1,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666th «-illion»s (This is the value of n when 10,000 X 106n = 1010100).

    Binary prefixes

    The International System of Quantities (ISQ) defines a series of prefixes denoting integer powers of 1024 between 10241 and 10248.[18]

    Power Value ISQ
    symbol
    ISQ
    prefix
    1 10241 Ki Kibi-
    2 10242 Mi Mebi-
    3 10243 Gi Gibi-
    4 10244 Ti Tebi-
    5 10245 Pi Pebi-
    6 10246 Ei Exbi-
    7 10247 Zi Zebi-
    8 10248 Yi Yobi-

    Other large numbers used in mathematics and physics

    • Avogadro number
    • Graham’s number
    • Skewes’ number
    • Steinhaus–Moser notation
    • TREE(3)
    • Rayo’s number

    See also

    • -yllion
    • Asaṃkhyeya
    • Chinese numerals
    • History of large numbers
    • Indefinite and fictitious numbers
    • Indian numbering system
    • Knuth’s up-arrow notation
    • Law of large numbers
    • List of numbers
    • Long and short scale
    • Metric prefix
    • Names of small numbers
    • Number names
    • Number prefix
    • Orders of magnitude
    • Orders of magnitude (data)
    • Orders of magnitude (numbers)
    • Power of 10

    References

    1. ^
      Bellos, Alex (2011). Alex’s Adventures in Numberland. A&C Black. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-4088-0959-4.
    2. ^
      The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). Houghton Mifflin. 2000. ISBN 0-395-82517-2.
    3. ^
      «Collins English Dictionary». HarperCollins.
    4. ^
      «Cambridge Dictionaries Online». Cambridge University Press.
    5. ^
      The Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.). Clarendon Press. 1991. ISBN 0-19-861186-2.
    6. ^
      «Oxford English Dictionary». Oxford University Press.
    7. ^
      The Random House Dictionary of the English Language (2nd ed.). Random House. 1987.
    8. ^
      Brown, Lesley; Little, William (1993). The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198612710.
    9. ^
      Webster, Noah (1981). Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. Merriam-Webster. ISBN 0877792011.
    10. ^
      Rowlett, Russ. «How Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measures». Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Archived from the original on 1 March 2000. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    11. ^
      Emerson, Oliver Farrar (1894). The History of the English Language. Macmillan and Co. p. 316.
    12. ^
      «Entry for centillion in dictionary.com». dictionary.com. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    13. ^
      «Zimbabwe rolls out Z$100tr note». BBC News. 16 January 2009. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    14. ^
      Kasner, Edward; Newman, James (1940). Mathematics and the Imagination. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-486-41703-4.
    15. ^ a b c d e f
      Conway, J. H.; Guy, R. K. (1998). The Book of Numbers. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 15–16. ISBN 0-387-97993-X.
    16. ^ Fish. «Conway’s illion converter». Retrieved 1 March 2023.
    17. ^
      Stewart, Ian (2017). Infinity: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-19-875523-4.
    18. ^
      «IEC 80000-13:2008». International Organization for Standardization. Retrieved 25 September 2022.

    Two naming scales for large numbers have been used in English and other European languages since the early modern era: the long and short scales. Most English variants use the short scale today, but the long scale remains dominant in many non-English-speaking areas, including continental Europe and Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America. These naming procedures are based on taking the number n occurring in 103n+3 (short scale) or 106n (long scale) and concatenating Latin roots for its units, tens, and hundreds place, together with the suffix -illion.

    Names of numbers above a trillion are rarely used in practice; such large numbers have practical usage primarily in the scientific domain, where powers of ten are expressed as 10 with a numeric superscript.

    Indian English does not use millions, but has its own system of large numbers including lakhs and crores.[1] English also has many words, such as «zillion», used informally to mean large but unspecified amounts; see indefinite and fictitious numbers.

    Standard dictionary numbers

    x Name
    (SS/LS, LS)
    SS
    (103x+3)
    LS
    (106x, 106x+3)
    Authorities
    AHD4[2] CED[3] COD[4] OED2[5] OEDweb[6] RHD2[7] SOED3[8] W3[9] HM[10]
    1 Million 106 106
    Milliard 109
    2 Billion 109 1012
    3 Trillion 1012 1018
    4 Quadrillion 1015 1024
    5 Quintillion 1018 1030  
    6 Sextillion 1021 1036  
    7 Septillion 1024 1042  
    8 Octillion 1027 1048  
    9 Nonillion 1030 1054  
    10 Decillion 1033 1060  
    11 Undecillion 1036 1066        
    12 Duodecillion 1039 1072        
    13 Tredecillion 1042 1078        
    14 Quattuordecillion 1045 1084        
    15 Quindecillion 1048 1090        
    16 Sexdecillion 1051 1096        
    17 Septendecillion 1054 10102        
    18 Octodecillion 1057 10108        
    19 Novemdecillion 1060 10114        
    20 Vigintillion 1063 10120  
    100 Centillion 10303 10600      

    Usage:

    • Short scale: US, English Canada, modern British, Australia, and Eastern Europe
    • Long scale: French Canada, older British, Western & Central Europe

    Apart from million, the words in this list ending with —illion are all derived by adding prefixes (bi-, tri-, etc., derived from Latin) to the stem —illion.[11] Centillion[12] appears to be the highest name ending in -«illion» that is included in these dictionaries. Trigintillion, often cited as a word in discussions of names of large numbers, is not included in any of them, nor are any of the names that can easily be created by extending the naming pattern (unvigintillion, duovigintillion, duo­quinqua­gint­illion, etc.).

    Name Value Authorities
    AHD4 CED COD OED2 OEDnew RHD2 SOED3 W3 UM
    Googol 10100
    Googolplex 10googol (1010100)

    All of the dictionaries included googol and googolplex, generally crediting it to the Kasner and Newman book and to Kasner’s nephew (see below). None include any higher names in the googol family (googolduplex, etc.). The Oxford English Dictionary comments that googol and googolplex are «not in formal mathematical use».

    Usage of names of large numbers

    Some names of large numbers, such as million, billion, and trillion, have real referents in human experience, and are encountered in many contexts. At times, the names of large numbers have been forced into common usage as a result of hyperinflation. The highest numerical value banknote ever printed was a note for 1 sextillion pengő (1021 or 1 milliard bilpengő as printed) printed in Hungary in 1946. In 2009, Zimbabwe printed a 100 trillion (1014) Zimbabwean dollar note, which at the time of printing was worth about US$30.[13]

    Names of larger numbers, however, have a tenuous, artificial existence, rarely found outside definitions, lists, and discussions of how large numbers are named. Even well-established names like sextillion are rarely used, since in the context of science, including astronomy, where such large numbers often occur, they are nearly always written using scientific notation. In this notation, powers of ten are expressed as 10 with a numeric superscript, e.g. «The X-ray emission of the radio galaxy is 1.3×1045 joules.» When a number such as 1045 needs to be referred to in words, it is simply read out as «ten to the forty-fifth». This is easier to say and less ambiguous than «quattuordecillion», which means something different in the long scale and the short scale.

    When a number represents a quantity rather than a count, SI prefixes can be used—thus «femtosecond», not «one quadrillionth of a second»—although often powers of ten are used instead of some of the very high and very low prefixes. In some cases, specialized units are used, such as the astronomer’s parsec and light year or the particle physicist’s barn.

    Nevertheless, large numbers have an intellectual fascination and are of mathematical interest, and giving them names is one way people try to conceptualize and understand them.

    One of the earliest examples of this is The Sand Reckoner, in which Archimedes gave a system for naming large numbers. To do this, he called the numbers up to a myriad myriad (108) «first numbers» and called 108 itself the «unit of the second numbers». Multiples of this unit then became the second numbers, up to this unit taken a myriad myriad times, 108·108=1016. This became the «unit of the third numbers», whose multiples were the third numbers, and so on. Archimedes continued naming numbers in this way up to a myriad myriad times the unit of the 108-th numbers, i.e. (10^{8})^{(10^{8})}=10^{8cdot 10^{8}}, and embedded this construction within another copy of itself to produce names for numbers up to {displaystyle ((10^{8})^{(10^{8})})^{(10^{8})}=10^{8cdot 10^{16}}.} Archimedes then estimated the number of grains of sand that would be required to fill the known universe, and found that it was no more than «one thousand myriad of the eighth numbers» (1063).

    Since then, many others have engaged in the pursuit of conceptualizing and naming numbers that have no existence outside the imagination. One motivation for such a pursuit is that attributed to the inventor of the word googol, who was certain that any finite number «had to have a name». Another possible motivation is competition between students in computer programming courses, where a common exercise is that of writing a program to output numbers in the form of English words.[citation needed]

    Most names proposed for large numbers belong to systematic schemes which are extensible. Thus, many names for large numbers are simply the result of following a naming system to its logical conclusion—or extending it further.[citation needed]

    Origins of the «standard dictionary numbers»

    Chuquet.gif

    The words bymillion and trimillion were first recorded in 1475 in a manuscript of Jehan Adam. Subsequently, Nicolas Chuquet wrote a book Triparty en la science des nombres which was not published during Chuquet’s lifetime. However, most of it was copied by Estienne de La Roche for a portion of his 1520 book, L’arismetique. Chuquet’s book contains a passage in which he shows a large number marked off into groups of six digits, with the comment:

    Ou qui veult le premier point peult signiffier million Le second point byllion Le tiers point tryllion Le quart quadrillion Le cinqe quyllion Le sixe sixlion Le sept.e septyllion Le huyte ottyllion Le neufe nonyllion et ainsi des ault’s se plus oultre on vouloit preceder

    (Or if you prefer the first mark can signify million, the second mark byllion, the third mark tryllion, the fourth quadrillion, the fifth quyillion, the sixth sixlion, the seventh septyllion, the eighth ottyllion, the ninth nonyllion and so on with others as far as you wish to go).

    Adam and Chuquet used the long scale of powers of a million; that is, Adam’s bymillion (Chuquet’s byllion) denoted 1012, and Adam’s trimillion (Chuquet’s tryllion) denoted 1018.

    The googol family

    The names googol and googolplex were invented by Edward Kasner’s nephew Milton Sirotta and introduced in Kasner and Newman’s 1940 book Mathematics and the Imagination[14] in the following passage:

    The name «googol» was invented by a child (Dr. Kasner’s nine-year-old nephew) who was asked to think up a name for a very big number, namely 1 with one hundred zeroes after it. He was very certain that this number was not infinite, and therefore equally certain that it had to have a name. At the same time that he suggested «googol» he gave a name for a still larger number: «googolplex.» A googolplex is much larger than a googol, but is still finite, as the inventor of the name was quick to point out. It was first suggested that a googolplex should be 1, followed by writing zeros until you got tired. This is a description of what would happen if one tried to write a googolplex, but different people get tired at different times and it would never do to have Carnera a better mathematician than Dr. Einstein, simply because he had more endurance. The googolplex is, then, a specific finite number, equal to 1 with a googol zeros after it.

    Value Name Authority
    10100 Googol Kasner and Newman, dictionaries (see above)
    10googol = 1010100 Googolplex Kasner and Newman, dictionaries (see above)

    John Horton Conway and Richard K. Guy[15] have suggested that N-plex be used as a name for 10N. This gives rise to the name googolplexplex for 10googolplex = 101010100. Conway and Guy[15] have proposed that N-minex be used as a name for 10−N, giving rise to the name googolminex for the reciprocal of a googolplex, which is written as 10-(10100). None of these names are in wide use.

    The names googol and googolplex inspired the name of the Internet company Google and its corporate headquarters, the Googleplex, respectively.

    Extensions of the standard dictionary numbers

    This section illustrates several systems for naming large numbers, and shows how they can be extended past vigintillion.

    Traditional British usage assigned new names for each power of one million (the long scale): 1,000,000 = 1 million; 1,000,0002 = 1 billion; 1,000,0003 = 1 trillion; and so on. It was adapted from French usage, and is similar to the system that was documented or invented by Chuquet.

    Traditional American usage (which was also adapted from French usage but at a later date), Canadian, and modern British usage assign new names for each power of one thousand (the short scale.) Thus, a billion is 1000 × 10002 = 109; a trillion is 1000 × 10003 = 1012; and so forth. Due to its dominance in the financial world (and by the US dollar), this was adopted for official United Nations documents.

    Traditional French usage has varied; in 1948, France, which had originally popularized the short scale worldwide, reverted to the long scale.

    The term milliard is unambiguous and always means 109. It is seldom seen in American usage and rarely in British usage, but frequently in continental European usage. The term is sometimes attributed to French mathematician Jacques Peletier du Mans circa 1550 (for this reason, the long scale is also known as the Chuquet-Peletier system), but the Oxford English Dictionary states that the term derives from post-Classical Latin term milliartum, which became milliare and then milliart and finally our modern term.

    Concerning names ending in -illiard for numbers 106n+3, milliard is certainly in widespread use in languages other than English, but the degree of actual use of the larger terms is questionable. The terms «Milliarde» in German, «miljard» in Dutch, «milyar» in Turkish, and «миллиард,» milliard (transliterated) in Russian, are standard usage when discussing financial topics.

    For additional details, see billion and long and short scale.

    The naming procedure for large numbers is based on taking the number n occurring in 103n+3 (short scale) or 106n (long scale) and concatenating Latin roots for its units, tens, and hundreds place, together with the suffix -illion. In this way, numbers up to 103·999+3 = 103000 (short scale) or 106·999 = 105994 (long scale) may be named. The choice of roots and the concatenation procedure is that of the standard dictionary numbers if n is 9 or smaller. For larger n (between 10 and 999), prefixes can be constructed based on a system described by Conway and Guy.[15] Today, sexdecillion and novemdecillion are standard dictionary numbers and, using the same reasoning as Conway and Guy did for the numbers up to nonillion, could probably be used to form acceptable prefixes. The Conway–Guy system for forming prefixes:

    Units Tens Hundreds
    1 Un N Deci NX Centi
    2 Duo MS Viginti N Ducenti
    3 Tre (*) NS Triginta NS Trecenti
    4 Quattuor NS Quadraginta NS Quadringenti
    5 Quinqua NS Quinquaginta NS Quingenti
    6 Se (*) N Sexaginta N Sescenti
    7 Septe (*) N Septuaginta N Septingenti
    8 Octo MX Octoginta MX Octingenti
    9 Nove (*) Nonaginta Nongenti
    (*) ^ When preceding a component marked S or X, «tre» changes to «tres» and «se» to «ses» or «sex»; similarly, when preceding a component marked M or N, «septe» and «nove» change to «septem» and «novem» or «septen» and «noven».

    Since the system of using Latin prefixes will become ambiguous for numbers with exponents of a size which the Romans rarely counted to, like 106,000,258, Conway and Guy co-devised with Allan Wechsler the following set of consistent conventions that permit, in principle, the extension of this system indefinitely to provide English short-scale names for any integer whatsoever.[15] The name of a number 103n+3, where n is greater than or equal to 1000, is formed by concatenating the names of the numbers of the form 103m+3, where m represents each group of comma-separated digits of n, with each but the last «-illion» trimmed to «-illi-«, or, in the case of m = 0, either «-nilli-» or «-nillion».[15] For example, 103,000,012, the 1,000,003rd «-illion» number, equals one «millinillitrillion»; 1033,002,010,111, the 11,000,670,036th «-illion» number, equals one «undecillinilli­septua­ginta­ses­centilli­sestrigint­illion»; and 1029,629,629,633, the 9,876,543,210th «-illion» number, equals one «nonillise­septua­ginta­octingentillitres­quadra­ginta­quingentillideciducent­illion».[15]

    The following table shows number names generated by the system described by Conway and Guy for the short and long scales.[16]

    Base -illion
    (short scale)
    Base -illion
    (long scale)
    Value US, Canada and modern British
    (short scale)
    Traditional British
    (long scale)
    Traditional European (Peletier)
    (long scale)
    SI
    Symbol
    SI
    Prefix
    1 1 106 Million Million Million M Mega-
    2 1 109 Billion Thousand million Milliard G Giga-
    3 2 1012 Trillion Billion Billion T Tera-
    4 2 1015 Quadrillion Thousand billion Billiard P Peta-
    5 3 1018 Quintillion Trillion Trillion E Exa-
    6 3 1021 Sextillion Thousand trillion Trilliard Z Zetta-
    7 4 1024 Septillion Quadrillion Quadrillion Y Yotta-
    8 4 1027 Octillion Thousand quadrillion Quadrilliard R Ronna-
    9 5 1030 Nonillion Quintillion Quintillion Q Quetta-
    10 5 1033 Decillion Thousand quintillion Quintilliard
    11 6 1036 Undecillion Sextillion Sextillion
    12 6 1039 Duodecillion Thousand sextillion Sextilliard
    13 7 1042 Tredecillion Septillion Septillion
    14 7 1045 Quattuordecillion Thousand septillion Septilliard
    15 8 1048 Quindecillion Octillion Octillion
    16 8 1051 Sedecillion Thousand octillion Octilliard
    17 9 1054 Septendecillion Nonillion Nonillion
    18 9 1057 Octodecillion Thousand nonillion Nonilliard
    19 10 1060 Novendecillion Decillion Decillion
    20 10 1063 Vigintillion Thousand decillion Decilliard
    21 11 1066 Unvigintillion Undecillion Undecillion
    22 11 1069 Duovigintillion Thousand undecillion Undecilliard
    23 12 1072 Tresvigintillion Duodecillion Duodecillion
    24 12 1075 Quattuor­vigint­illion Thousand duodecillion Duodecilliard
    25 13 1078 Quinvigintillion Tredecillion Tredecillion
    26 13 1081 Sesvigintillion Thousand tredecillion Tredecilliard
    27 14 1084 Septemvigintillion Quattuordecillion Quattuordecillion
    28 14 1087 Octovigintillion Thousand quattuordecillion Quattuordecilliard
    29 15 1090 Novemvigintillion Quindecillion Quindecillion
    30 15 1093 Trigintillion Thousand quindecillion Quindecilliard
    31 16 1096 Untrigintillion Sedecillion Sedecillion
    32 16 1099 Duotrigintillion Thousand sedecillion Sedecilliard
    33 17 10102 Trestrigintillion Septendecillion Septendecillion
    34 17 10105 Quattuor­trigint­illion Thousand septendecillion Septendecilliard
    35 18 10108 Quintrigintillion Octodecillion Octodecillion
    36 18 10111 Sestrigintillion Thousand octodecillion Octodecilliard
    37 19 10114 Septentrigintillion Novendecillion Novendecillion
    38 19 10117 Octotrigintillion Thousand novendecillion Novendecilliard
    39 20 10120 Noventrigintillion Vigintillion Vigintillion
    40 20 10123 Quadragintillion Thousand vigintillion Vigintilliard
    50 25 10153 Quinquagintillion Thousand quinvigintillion Quinvigintilliard
    60 30 10183 Sexagintillion Thousand trigintillion Trigintilliard
    70 35 10213 Septuagintillion Thousand quintrigintillion Quintrigintilliard
    80 40 10243 Octogintillion Thousand quadragintillion Quadragintilliard
    90 45 10273 Nonagintillion Thousand quin­quadra­gint­illion Quin­quadra­gint­illiard
    100 50 10303 Centillion Thousand quinquagintillion Quinquagintilliard
    101 51 10306 Uncentillion Unquinquagintillion Unquinquagintillion
    110 55 10333 Decicentillion Thousand quin­quinqua­gint­illion Quin­quinqua­gint­illiard
    111 56 10336 Undecicentillion Ses­quinqua­gint­illion Ses­quinqua­gint­illion
    120 60 10363 Viginticentillion Thousand sexagintillion Sexagintilliard
    121 61 10366 Unviginticentillion Unsexagintillion Unsexagintillion
    130 65 10393 Trigintacentillion Thousand quinsexagintillion Quinsexagintilliard
    140 70 10423 Quadra­gintacent­illion Thousand septuagintillion Septuagintilliard
    150 75 10453 Quinqua­gintacent­illion Thousand quin­septua­gint­illion Quin­septua­gint­illiard
    160 80 10483 Sexagintacentillion Thousand octogintillion Octogintilliard
    170 85 10513 Septuagintacentillion Thousand quinoctogintillion Quinoctogintilliard
    180 90 10543 Octogintacentillion Thousand nonagintillion Nonagintilliard
    190 95 10573 Nonagintacentillion Thousand quinnonagintillion Quinnonagintilliard
    200 100 10603 Ducentillion Thousand centillion Centilliard
    300 150 10903 Trecentillion Thousand quinqua­gintacent­illion Quinqua­gintacent­illiard
    400 200 101203 Quadringentillion Thousand ducentillion Ducentilliard
    500 250 101503 Quingentillion Thousand quinqua­gintaducent­illion Quinqua­gintaducent­illiard
    600 300 101803 Sescentillion Thousand trecentillion Trecentilliard
    700 350 102103 Septingentillion Thousand quinqua­gintatrecent­illion Quinqua­gintatrecent­illiard
    800 400 102403 Octingentillion Thousand quadringentillion Quadringentilliard
    900 450 102703 Nongentillion Thousand quinqua­ginta­quadringent­illion Quinqua­ginta­quadringent­illiard
    1000 500 103003 Millillion (alt. millinillion)[17] Thousand quingentillion Quingentilliard
    Value Name Equivalent
    US, Canadian and modern British
    (short scale)
    Traditional British
    (long scale)
    Traditional European (Peletier)
    (long scale)
    10100 Googol Ten duotrigintillion Ten thousand sedecillion Ten sedecilliard
    1010100 Googolplex [1] Ten trillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilli­trestrigintatre­centillitrestrigintatre­centilliduotrigintatre­centillion [2] Ten thousand milli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentillion [2] Ten milli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexagintasescentilli­sesexaginta­sescentilliard
    ^[1] Googolplex’s short scale name is derived from it equal to ten of the 3,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​333,​332nd «-illion»s (This is the value of n when 10 X 10(3n + 3) = 1010100)
    ^[2] Googolplex’s long scale name (both traditional British and traditional European) is derived from it being equal to ten thousand of the 1,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666,​666th «-illion»s (This is the value of n when 10,000 X 106n = 1010100).

    Binary prefixes

    The International System of Quantities (ISQ) defines a series of prefixes denoting integer powers of 1024 between 10241 and 10248.[18]

    Power Value ISQ
    symbol
    ISQ
    prefix
    1 10241 Ki Kibi-
    2 10242 Mi Mebi-
    3 10243 Gi Gibi-
    4 10244 Ti Tebi-
    5 10245 Pi Pebi-
    6 10246 Ei Exbi-
    7 10247 Zi Zebi-
    8 10248 Yi Yobi-

    Other large numbers used in mathematics and physics

    • Avogadro number
    • Graham’s number
    • Skewes’ number
    • Steinhaus–Moser notation
    • TREE(3)
    • Rayo’s number

    See also

    • -yllion
    • Asaṃkhyeya
    • Chinese numerals
    • History of large numbers
    • Indefinite and fictitious numbers
    • Indian numbering system
    • Knuth’s up-arrow notation
    • Law of large numbers
    • List of numbers
    • Long and short scale
    • Metric prefix
    • Names of small numbers
    • Number names
    • Number prefix
    • Orders of magnitude
    • Orders of magnitude (data)
    • Orders of magnitude (numbers)
    • Power of 10

    References

    1. ^
      Bellos, Alex (2011). Alex’s Adventures in Numberland. A&C Black. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-4088-0959-4.
    2. ^
      The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). Houghton Mifflin. 2000. ISBN 0-395-82517-2.
    3. ^
      «Collins English Dictionary». HarperCollins.
    4. ^
      «Cambridge Dictionaries Online». Cambridge University Press.
    5. ^
      The Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.). Clarendon Press. 1991. ISBN 0-19-861186-2.
    6. ^
      «Oxford English Dictionary». Oxford University Press.
    7. ^
      The Random House Dictionary of the English Language (2nd ed.). Random House. 1987.
    8. ^
      Brown, Lesley; Little, William (1993). The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198612710.
    9. ^
      Webster, Noah (1981). Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. Merriam-Webster. ISBN 0877792011.
    10. ^
      Rowlett, Russ. «How Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measures». Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Archived from the original on 1 March 2000. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    11. ^
      Emerson, Oliver Farrar (1894). The History of the English Language. Macmillan and Co. p. 316.
    12. ^
      «Entry for centillion in dictionary.com». dictionary.com. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    13. ^
      «Zimbabwe rolls out Z$100tr note». BBC News. 16 January 2009. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    14. ^
      Kasner, Edward; Newman, James (1940). Mathematics and the Imagination. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-486-41703-4.
    15. ^ a b c d e f
      Conway, J. H.; Guy, R. K. (1998). The Book of Numbers. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 15–16. ISBN 0-387-97993-X.
    16. ^ Fish. «Conway’s illion converter». Retrieved 1 March 2023.
    17. ^
      Stewart, Ian (2017). Infinity: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-19-875523-4.
    18. ^
      «IEC 80000-13:2008». International Organization for Standardization. Retrieved 25 September 2022.

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