As infinity is very big or rather endless, it can be said that there are infinitely many 0's in infinity. It is also a common thing to say that anything divided by 0 is infinity. So, there is one 0 in infinity.
Answer. infinite no of zeroes.
There are an infinite number of infinities.
There is no biggest, last number … except infinity. Except infinity isn't a number. But some infinities are literally bigger than others.
In terms of logarithms, the original value 0 corresponds to −∞, while the original infinite value corresponds to +∞. When we treat both possible values −∞ and +∞ as a single infinity, we thus treat the original values 0 and infinity as similar.
infinity, the concept of something that is unlimited, endless, without bound. The common symbol for infinity, ∞, was invented by the English mathematician John Wallis in 1655.
Addition Property
If any number is added to infinity, the sum is also equal to infinity.
Mathematically, if we see infinity is the unimaginable end of the number line. As no number is imagined beyond it(no real number is larger than infinity). The symbol (∞) sets the limit or unboundedness in calculus.
Zero is infinity and infinity is zero.
The concept of zero and that of infinity are linked, but, obviously, zero is not infinity. Rather, if we have N / Z, with any positive N, the quotient grows without limit as Z approaches 0.
Multiplying infinity by infinity will result in infinity.
With this definition, there is nothing (meaning: no real numbers) larger than infinity.
1% of infinity as the same kind of infinity from which you made 1% of. Infinity/100=infinity.
Now this statement is most commonly (though not correctly) referred to as 1/0 = infinity and is so common in mathematics and physics that people working/studying in this field take limits to be obvious.
Infinity is not a real number and is only used as a representation for an extremely large real number. Dividing 1 by infinity is equal to zero.
A googol is 10 to the 100th power, which is 1 followed by 100 zeros. While this is an unimaginably large number, there's still an infinite quantity of larger numbers.
Written out in ordinary decimal notation, it is 1 followed by 10100 zeroes; that is, a 1 followed by a googol of zeroes.
Some numbers come after googolplex, and we have named them too. Skewes' number is one of the larger numbers than even a googolplex. This number was developed by mathematician Stanley Skewes and named after him. Skewes had a particular interest in prime numbers.
In other words, any value from negative infinity to positive infinity will yield a real result. Thus, we can write the domain as: (-∞, ∞) We used parentheses rather than brackets around each endpoint because the endpoints are negative and positive infinity, which by definition have no bound.
The result of ∞ - ∞ is undefined.
Infinite exponentiation means that you take 1 and multiply it by a scaler, a, infitnite number of times. Scaling by a > 1 yields greater and greater number. So, (a>1)∞=∞. Downscaling infinitly by a<1 yields 0: (a<1)∞=0.
You've probably gotten into these contests as kids before, seeing who can spit out the biggest number. Everyone loves to pull out infinity, or the fabled “infinity plus one.” Maybe if you were inclined to do so, you pulled out the googol or the googolplex. Smaller than infinity, but really big numbers each.
Yet even this relatively modest version of infinity has many bizarre properties, including being so vast that it remains the same, no matter how big a number is added to it (including another infinity). So infinity plus one is still infinity.