In the US and in the scientific community, a nonillion is 10^30. If you really had a nonillion pages, it would be similar in weight to about 850 earth sized planets, or about 2.5 times the weight of Jupiter. If you know anything about chemistry, you can think of a nonillion as about 1.66 million moles.
A building capable of housing 37 nonillion pages would basically qualify as a Dyson Sphere.
Note that the Brits like to square these numbers, so if you had a nonillion pages in the UK you wouldn't have to worry about the warehouse catching on fire, because the mass would be sufficient to spontaneously begin fusion and become a star under the weight of its own gravity. Actually it would probably be closer to an entire galaxy. Or maybe even a galaxy cluster. I'd have to look that up.
I don't know how much is a nonillion, but it seems immense.
A nonillion, as u/penisse might tell you, is above octillion. Million, billion, trillion, etc. Nonillion is the 9th such.
Although he would probably do it with much more finesse. Finesse Penisse.
I seem to recall if you ask Alexa what the mass of the sun is, in grams, the answer contains nonillion.
Jim, that's a bottle of Alberta Premium, not Alexa.
In the US and in the scientific community, a nonillion is 10^30. If you really had a nonillion pages, it would be similar in weight to about 850 earth sized planets, or about 2.5 times the weight of Jupiter. If you know anything about chemistry, you can think of a nonillion as about 1.66 million moles.
A building capable of housing 37 nonillion pages would basically qualify as a Dyson Sphere.
Note that the Brits like to square these numbers, so if you had a nonillion pages in the UK you wouldn't have to worry about the warehouse catching on fire, because the mass would be sufficient to spontaneously begin fusion and become a star under the weight of its own gravity. Actually it would probably be closer to an entire galaxy. Or maybe even a galaxy cluster. I'd have to look that up.
Now you are the MVP!
Thanks for taking the time!