The decicutethriterator is equal to E100(#^^#>#)^#^#10 using Extended Cascading-E Notation.[1] The term was coined by Sbiis Saibian.
Etymology[]
The name of this number comes from the prefix "decic-" (means adding "^#^#10") and the number tethriterator.
Approximations in other notations[]
| Notation | Approximation |
|---|---|
| BEAF | \(\{100,100 (X \uparrow\uparrow (X+1) * X^{10}) 2\}\) |
| Bird's array notation | \(\{100,100 [11 \backslash 1,2] 2\}\) |
| Fast-growing hierarchy | \(f_{\varepsilon_{\omega}^{\omega^{10}}}(100)\) |
| Hardy hierarchy | \(H_{\varepsilon_{\omega}^{\varepsilon_{\omega}^{\omega^{10}}}}(100)\) |
| Slow-growing hierarchy | \(g_{\vartheta(\varepsilon_{\Omega^2}^{\Omega^9 \omega})}(100)\) |
Sources[]
- ↑ Saibian, Sbiis. 4.3.7 Extended Cascading-E Numbers Part I. One to Infinity. Retrieved 2017-01-02.