The dunillion is equal to \(10^{3\times10^{3\times10^{6,000,000,000,000,000}}+3}\). This term was coined by YouTuber Metsuka The Cute Princess 2007.[1]
Etmology[]
This number is generalized from "d" (2nd Tier 3 multiplicative root) and "lun" (5th Tier 4 root from "lunillion" with the first letter removed as a Tier 3 multiplicative) and the suffix "-illion".
Approximations[]
Notation | Expression |
---|---|
Up-arrow notation | \(10 \uparrow (3 \times (10 \uparrow (3 \times (10 \uparrow (6 \times (10 \uparrow 15)))))+3)\) |
Chained arrow notation | \(10 \rightarrow (3 \times (10 \rightarrow (3 \times (10 \rightarrow (6 \times (10 \uparrow 15)))))+3)\) |
H* function | H(H(H(2*H(4)-1)-1)) (exact) |
BEAF | \(\{10,\{3\times \{10,3 \times \{10,6 \times \{10,15\}\}\}+3\}\}\) |
Sources[]
- ↑ Metsuka The Cute Princess 2007, All New Official Tier-4 illion Numbers Accessed 2024-05-02.