The number associated with my diurnal age today, \( \textbf{28144}\), has the property that its power tower of digits is equal to its product of digits. That is to say:
2 ^ 8 ^ 1 ^ 4 ^ 4 = 2 x 8 x 1 x 4 x 4 = 36
I thought it was time to clarify the reasons behind the right associativity of power towers and so I consulated Gemini. Here was the response:
Let's break down the mechanics of power towers, tetration, and the crucial role of associativity in how we evaluate these operations.
Associativity: The Order of Operations
In mathematics, associativity dictates how we group numbers when an expression contains multiple instances of the same operator.
- Left-Associative: Operations are evaluated from left to right. Subtraction and division are left-associative by convention.
For example, 10 − 5 − 2 is evaluated as (10 − 5) − 2 = 3. - Right-Associative: Operations are evaluated from right to left.
Exponentiation is mathematically defined as right-associative. When you see a sequence of exponents, you evaluate them from the top down.
Here is why this convention exists: if exponentiation were left-associative, it would be mathematically redundant. Let's look at 232.
- If it were left-associative: (23)2 = 82 = 64.
By the rules of exponents, (ab)c = ab × c. Therefore, a left-associative power tower is just a disguised way of multiplying exponents together (23 × 2 = 26 = 64). We already have multiplication, so we don't need a new convention for this. - Because it is right-associative: 2(32) = 29 = 512.
Evaluating from the top-down creates a fundamentally new, uniquely powerful operation that cannot be simplified by basic multiplication.
Power Towers
A power tower is simply a visual stack of exponents, written as abcd.
Because of the right-associative rule, you always start at the highest point of the tower and work your way down to the base.
For example, to evaluate 2322:
- Start at the top: 22 = 4
- Move down one level: 34 = 81
- Calculate the final base: 281
The result is 2,417,851,639,229,258,349,412,352.
Tetration: Iterated Exponentiation
Tetration is a specific type of power tower where the base number is identical throughout the entire stack.
Just as multiplication is repeated addition, and exponentiation is repeated multiplication, tetration is repeated exponentiation. It is the fourth fundamental hyperoperation in mathematics (following addition, multiplication, and exponentiation).
Because standard exponentiation notation becomes visually cumbersome when stacked high, mathematicians use specific notations for tetration:
- Knuth's Up-Arrow Notation: a ↑↑ n
- Rudy Rucker's Superscript Prefix: na
In both notations, a is the base and n is the height of the tower.
Examples of Tetration:
- 23 (or 3 ↑↑ 2) = 33 = 27
- 33 (or 3 ↑↑ 3) = 333 = 327 = 7,625,597,484,987
The Computational Horizon
Tetration generates exponential growth at a scale that rapidly breaks the limits of standard computation.
If we take just one more step up the tower to 43 (or 3 ↑↑ 4), the expression becomes 3333, which evaluates to 37,625,597,484,987.
This number has over 3.6 trillion decimal digits. While theoretical mathematics can easily define and manipulate the expression 43, calculating the exact integer quickly leaves the realm of standard datatypes. Numbers at this scale become highly unrenderable in their full decimal form; storing just the digits of 43 as a standard text file would require terabytes of disk space. When computational number theory investigates numbers at or beyond this threshold, it relies on custom algorithms, modulo arithmetic, or symbolic representation frameworks to analyze the properties of the digits without attempting to hold the entire integer in memory.




