Mathematicians discovered a strange new kind of infinity by playing with numbers like they're building blocks.
Imagine you have a bag full of counting blocks, one for each number: 1, 2, 3, and so on. That’s the kind of infinity we know from counting forever. But what if there was another kind of infinity that's bigger?
Like Having Two Bags at Once
Think about this: you have two bags of blocks, one with all the numbers (1, 2, 3...), and the other has all the fractions like 1/2, 3/4, or even 5/1. At first glance, it seems like there are more blocks in the second bag. But here's the twist: you can pair them off perfectly, every number gets a fraction to match.
So even though one bag looks bigger, they have the same kind of infinity. That’s when mathematicians got curious: what if there was an even bigger infinity, like a third bag that couldn’t be matched with any other?
They found it by thinking creatively, just like you might find a new way to stack your blocks!
Examples
- A mathematician finds a new type of infinity by comparing the sizes of infinite sets, like counting how many numbers are in two different groups.
- Imagine having an endless bag of marbles and discovering another bag that has even more marbles than you thought possible.
- A student learns about infinity and realizes there are multiple types of infinity, not just one.
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See also
- Does infinity exist in the real world?
- How An Infinite Hotel Ran Out Of Room?
- How Does Mathematician Explains Infinity in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED Work?
- Why It’s Impossible to Ever Run Out of QR Codes (Even Theoretically)?
- What is Cantor’s hierarchy?