From: Archimedes Plutonium on


Transfer Principle wrote:

> solve 2x = log(x!) for x
>
> and then clicked on "use the base 10 logarithm." Though Wolfram
> returns the trivial value x = 0, there is a graph, and one can
> roll the mouse over the non-trivial solution:
>
> (268.087, 536.175)
>
> Thus, we find that 268! is approximately 10^536.
>

268! = 10^536
Thanks, will store that for future use.

I don't think there is a nucleus with 268 nucleons

What I am fascinated with, is the chain of events that some years or
months past
where I picked 10^500, almost out of the blue, but of course it is so
symmetrical,
and come to find that a lucky pick is pretty close to where the
boundary between
finite and infinite really exists. When I picked 10^500 I was never
cognizant that the
Strong Nuclear Force is nonexistent there.

Archimedes Plutonium
http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies