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The universe comprises all matter in space. This includes a very large number (200 billion to 2 trillion) galaxies. Each galaxy comprises a very large number of stars: our contains 100 thousand million stars.
There are 92 elements found naturally in the universe.
Yes it does. Everything in the universe is made up of elements. Elements are a combination of atoms.
No; the two are quite different. The Universe is everything we can see; it contains many galaxies.
They were formed in supernovae.
Chemists deal with the table of elements and the universe contains these elements. Astronomers study space and the planets stars and whatever else is in space contains these elements. Chemistry helped the U.S. to be the first to the moon.
The periodic table does. If you mean the actual elements, nothing in the universe can contain all elements at once, since many are to unstable to be formed and exist while the others are being created.
You may be looking for "Universe". But that also includes all of time.
A galaxy contains billions of stars. A universe contains billions of galaxies.
The universe is everything that exists. It contains everything.
Hydrogen, helium, oxygen, and carbon are the most abundant elements in the universe.
Like our galaxy contains billions of stars, the universe contains billions of galaxies.
"The" 12 elements is wrong. There are over 100 elements.
The most common elements in the universe are, Carbon, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Iron and Hydrogen,
the building blocks of the universe are called chemical elements or just elements
The universe contains countless galaxies, think of the universe as a galaxy of galaxies.
The universe contains countless galaxies, think of the universe as a galaxy of galaxies.