Jugglers who give me vertigo
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We all know that a lot of jugglers have a soft spot for mathematics (or is it the other way round?).

That's why I wasn't surprised, when reading an entry blog (in Spanish) about big numbers, to find out that two of the three numbers they mention were introduced by mathematician-jugglers.

This kind of numbers are so overwhelmingly big that thinking about them can give you mathematical vertigo.

The first one is Shannon number which is an estimate of the number of chess games possible. Claude Shannon was an amateur juggler and he is known for having built the first juggling robot and proving the first juggling-related theorems.

The other number is Graham's number, a number calculated in 64 steps where each step grows much bigger than the previous and where the first step alone has more digits than the number of particles in the Universe!
It is named after Ronald Graham, mathematician, trampolinist, juggler and past president of the IJA.

The audience is the show
We have just returned home from the fascinating city of Valencia where we performed for the ¨Fallas¨ We opened and closed the Gala show which led into the inauguration of this years Queen. I wonder if we will ever perform for such an ornately attired audience again.

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