In terms of cardinal numbers you can't count past infinity. There are of course infinite sets with larger cardinality than the natural numbers, for example the real numbers. But in terms of ordering - or ordinal numbers it is perfectly possible to have a countable set with an ordering that goes “beyond infinity”.
"There is no numbers after infinite." Hi Arun, Infinity is not a number. It is a concept of an object that is larger than any real number that does not have a finite end in the sequence.
With this definition, there is nothing (meaning: no real numbers) larger than infinity. There is another way to look at this question. It come from an idea of Georg Cantor who lived from 1845 to 1918.
The number 1000000000000000000000000 is called a quintillion. In the long scale system of naming numbers, a quintillion is equal to 10^18 or a million billion. In the short scale system, which is commonly used in the United States, a quintillion is equal to 10^15 or a billion billion.
Beyond the infinity known as ℵ0 (the cardinality of the natural numbers) there is ℵ1 (which is larger) … ℵ2 (which is larger still) … and, in fact, an infinite variety of different infinities.
God is neither finite nor infinite and his greatness is beyond infinity. Augustine is original in combining these three aspects in his philosophy, and all three aspects can again be found in Cantor.
There is no biggest, last number … except infinity. Except infinity isn't a number. But some infinities are literally bigger than others.
There is no number before infinity. It is possible to represent infinity minus one as a mathematical expression, but it does not actually equal anything or have any real mathematical value.
Zillion sounds like an actual number because of its similarity to billion, million, and trillion, and it is modeled on these real numerical values. However, like its cousin jillion, zillion is an informal way to talk about a number that's enormous but indefinite.
Google is the word that is more common to us now, and so it is sometimes mistakenly used as a noun to refer to the number 10100. That number is a googol, so named by Milton Sirotta, the nephew of the American mathematician Edward Kasner, who was working with large numbers like 10100.
Visualized this way, you'll see it's possible to keep up this one-to-one correspondence between our sets forever, which means infinity and infinity plus one are actually equal.
Googolplex may well designate the largest number named with a single word, but of course that doesn't make it the biggest number. In a last-ditch effort to hold onto the hope that there is indeed such a thing as the largest number… Child: Infinity! Nothing is larger than infinity!
Googolplex. The Googolplex is 10googol or 1010^100. Essentially, it's 10 to the power of googol.
INFINITY IS THE BIGGEST NUMBER FOLLOWED BY OMEGA (even though they are not real numbers) thats the answer to your question.
Infinity has no end
So we imagine traveling on and on, trying hard to get there, but that is not actually infinity. So don't think like that (it just hurts your brain!). Just think "endless", or "boundless". If there is no reason something should stop, then it is infinite.
Infinite sets are not all created equal, however. There are actually many different sizes or levels of infinity; some infinite sets are vastly larger than other infinite sets.
Aristotle handled the topic of infinity in Physics and in Metaphysics. He distinguished between actual and potential infinity. Actual infinity is completed and definite, and consists of infinitely many elements. Potential infinity is never complete: elements can be always added, but never infinitely many.
The number 42 is, in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, the "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything," calculated by an enormous supercomputer named Deep Thought over a period of 7.5 million years.
1111 is an alert from the angelic energies that you are supported by forces you cannot see. You can sink into relief, celebrate, and get excited when you see 1111—it gives you confirmation that everything is on schedule and divinely guided in your world at this time.
In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, advanced alien beings create a supercomputer, called Deep Thought, to figure out the answer to the so-called Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything. After calculating for 7.5-million years, Deep Thought determined the answer was the number 42.
Discovered by mathemagician Srinivas Ramanujan, 1729 is said to be the magic number because it is the sole number which can be expressed as the sum of the cubes of two different sets of numbers. Ramanujan’s conclusions are summed up as under: 1) 10 3 + 9 3 = 1729 and 2) 12 3 + 1 3 = 1729.
What's bigger than a googolplex? Even though a googolplex is immense, Graham's number and Skewes' number are much larger. Named after mathematicians Ronald Graham and Stanley Skewes, both numbers are so large that they can't be represented in the observable universe.
Multiplication Property
If a number is multiplied by infinity, then the value of the product is also equal to infinity.
Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920), the man who reshaped twentieth-century mathematics with his various contributions in several mathematical domains, including mathematical analysis, infinite series, continued fractions, number theory, and game theory is recognized as one of history's greatest mathematicians.