No.
There are not believed to be even a googol electrons in the entire universe. There are thought to be about 10^79. That pretty much rules out a far larger number (googolplex), of much bigger things (grains of sand vs electrons), in a much smaller area (Earth vs universe).
The mass of the Earth is about 6 * 10^24 kg. If we pick a very tiny grain of sand (1 milligram), and if the Earth were entirely composed of sand, it would be about 6 * 10^30 grains.
That's well short of a googol (10^100), let alone a googolplex (10^(10^100)).
2007-07-20 06:13:21
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answer #1
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answered by McFate 7
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Easily. In fact, I'm pretty certain that on any mile of beachfront, you'd already have a googleplex of grains of sand. Remember that sand grains are miniscule, and I'm certain a standard bucket of sand would have over a million grains.... Think of how many buckets are in a mile of beachfront, and you'll get an idea of exactly how many grains of sand you could estimate there are.... that's a serious amount of grains!
2007-07-20 06:18:39
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answer #2
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answered by dethaddr 1
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There are Yahooplex grains of sand in the world, which is greater than googleplex.
Just like Yahoo is a better search engine that google. Google shmoogle.
So the next time a friendly person tells you to "google it", just respond, "Nah, I'd yahoo it if you don't mind."
2007-07-20 06:13:40
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answer #3
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answered by Dr D 7
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No.
Particles in the universe ~10^80
2007-07-20 06:28:57
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answer #4
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answered by ? 5
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yes
2007-07-20 06:17:45
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answer #5
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answered by iknowu2jan 3
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