Grand tritet is equal to \(\{4,4,4,2\}\) in BEAF.[1] The term was coined by ARsygo.
Approximations[]
Notation | Approximation |
---|---|
Bird's array notation | \(\{4,4,4,2\}\) (exact) |
Chained arrow notation | \(4\rightarrow4\rightarrow4\rightarrow5\) |
Copy notation | \(4[4\#6]\) |
DeepLineMadom's Array Notation | \(4[5,2]4\) (exact) |
Hyper-E notation | \(\text{E}[4]4\#\#4\#4\#4\#4\#4\) |
Hyperfactorial array notation | \(4![5]\) |
Strong array notation | \(\text{s}(4,4,5,2)\) |
X-Sequence Hyper-Exponential Notation | \(4\{X+4\}4\) (exact) |
Fast-growing hierarchy | \(f_{\omega+4}(4)\) |
Hardy hierarchy | \(H_{\omega^{\omega+4}}(4)\) |
Slow-growing hierarchy | \(g_{\Gamma_{\Gamma_{\Gamma_{\Gamma_0} } } }(4)\) |
Sources[]
- ↑ AR Googol - Numbers from BEAF. Retrieved 2023-04-02.