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- What is infinity divided by infinity? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
I know that $\infty \infty$ is not generally defined However, if we have 2 equal infinities divided by each other, would it be 1? if we have an infinity divided by another half-as-big infinity, for
- Can I subtract infinity from infinity? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Can this interpretation ("subtract one infinity from another infinite quantity, that is twice large as the previous infinity") help us with things like limn→∞(1 + x n)n, lim n → ∞ (1 + x n) n, or is it just a parlor trick for a much easier kind of limit?
- One divided by Infinity? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Similarly, the reals and the complex numbers each exclude infinity, so arithmetic isn't defined for it You can extend those sets to include infinity - but then you have to extend the definition of the arithmetic operators, to cope with that extended set And then, you need to start thinking about arithmetic differently
- complex analysis - Infinity plus Infinity - Mathematics Stack Exchange
You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do I get it? Instead, you can save this post to reference later
- What is imaginary infinity, - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The infinity can somehow branch in a peculiar way, but I will not go any deeper here This is just to show that you can consider far more exotic infinities if you want to Let us then turn to the complex plane The most common compactification is the one-point one (known as the Riemann sphere), where a single infinity ∞~ ∞ is added
- Types of infinity - Mathematics Stack Exchange
I understand that there are different types of infinity: one can (even intuitively) understand that the infinity of the reals is different from the infinity of the natural numbers Or that the infi
- Why is $\\infty\\times 0$ indeterminate? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
In particular, infinity is the same thing as "1 over 0", so "zero times infinity" is the same thing as "zero over zero", which is an indeterminate form Your title says something else than "infinity times zero"
- mathematical operations with infinity [closed] - Mathematics Stack Exchange
I suppose these are the equations with infinity that are universally considered correct: ∞ = ∞ ∞ + n = ∞ ∞ * n = ∞ n ∞ = 0 Where n can be any possible value These equations can be rearranged to
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