Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
They estimate (guess) that there are at least 70 sextillion stars.
A sextillion worlds, each complete in every detail down to the atomic level.
A 2010 star count estimate was 300 sextillion (3 x 10) in the observable universe.
However, Zimbabwe's peak month of inflation is estimated at 6.5 sextillion percent in mid-November 2008.
A palynologist will tell you that you could fit fifty sextillion of them in a level teaspoon.
A newspaper shows Porky traveling to Africa to hunt the rare dodo bird, worth four sextillion dollars.
The latest estimate of stars of all known galaxies in the visible universe is at least 1 sextillion, or 1 followed by 21 zeros.
The observable universe contains between 10 and 10 stars (between 10 sextillion and 1 septillion stars).
Notes of one milliard b.-pengő (one sextillion or 10 pengő) were printed but never issued.
Thus, one modern Brazilian real is equivalent to 2,750,000,000,000,000,000,000 times the old real, that is, 2.75 sextillion réis.
The planet had been slowed down - but as its mass was a sextillion times greater than the ship's, the change in its orbit was far too small to be detectable.
That number is this:" 1.03144 + X 10 "-or written in full:" 10,314,424,798,490,535,546,171,949,056 "-or more than ten million sextillion universes in our group."
The total paper Marks increased to 1.2 sextillion (or 1,200,000,000,000,000,000,000) in July 1924 and continued to fall in value to one third of their conversion value in Rentenmarks.
Splicing in all the plus factors, we'd find that the sphere could comfortably support a human population of 3 x 1023 individuals, which is to say a good many sextillion or septillion people - work out the exponents yourself.
The JPL astronomers also noted that there are "50 billion other galaxies", potentially yielding more than one sextillion "Earth analog" planets if all galaxies have similar numbers of planets to the Milky Way.
After quadrillion come quintillion, sextillion, septillion, octillion - and nonillion, which has 30 zeros in the United States and France, and no less than 54 zeros in Britain and Germany.
STEVE: So the code answered that question for me because he has a thousand years, then we've got a million, then a billion, a trillion, quadrillion, quintillion, sextillion, septillion, octillion, and then nonillion.
This number is reasonably well defined, since we know what stars are and what the observable universe is, but its value is not known with any certainty but is presently estimated to be approximately 70 sextillion (short scale).
The prefix zetta indicates the seventh power of 1000 and means 10 in the International System of Units (SI), and therefore one zettabyte is one sextillion (one long scale trilliard) bytes.
The first aspect of the paradox, "the argument by scale", is a function of the raw numbers involved: there are an estimated 200-400 billion (2-4 x10) stars in the Milky Way and 70 sextillion (7x10) in the visible universe.
Erik P. DeBenedictis of Sandia National Laboratories theorizes that a zettaflop (10) (one sextillion FLOPS) computer is required to accomplish full weather modeling, which could cover a two week time span accurately.
EFILM introduces a virtual keycode mechanism that enables unique tracking, identification, frame accurate editing and asset management of each and every frame (up to 5.45 sextillion), either digitally generated, composited with other (single or multiple) film material.
Thus, a very rough estimate from these numbers would suggest there are around one sextillion (10) stars in the observable universe; though a 2003 study by Australian National University astronomers resulted in a figure of 70 sextillion (7 x 10).
The numbers past a trillion, in ascending powers of ten, are as follows: quadrillion, quintillion, sextillion, septillion, octillion, nonillion, decillion, undecillion, duodecillion, tredecillion, quattuordecillion, and quindecillion (that's 10 to the 48th, or a one followed by 48 zeros).