(July 29, 2014 at 4:25 pm)vorlon13 Wrote: Banned for not having this memorized:
In number theory, Skewes' number is any of several extremely large numbers used by the South African mathematician Stanley Skewes as upper bounds for the smallest natural number x for which
\pi(x) > \operatorname{li}(x),
where π is the prime-counting function and li is the logarithmic integral function. These bounds have since been improved by others: there is a crossing near e^{727.95133}. It is not known whether it is the smallest.
Yeah.. I'm really bad with math..
Banned for only confusing me further.
Give me your kills and deaths and I can guesstimate your KDr.