No, there are much, much more than that.
We haven't observed all of the stars in the Universe, so we don't know what is the largest yet.
Most of the light in the universe comes from the stars. Stars create their own light using nuclear fusion.
We see the light of main sequence stars throughout the universe. Such stars fuse hydrogen.
i thing stars
Stars in the universe twinkle because of refraction not gravity.
Stars are scattered all across our universe but guess what? there are no stars in our solar system besides the sun!
The Universe.
A galaxy contains billions of stars. A universe contains billions of galaxies.
All stars and galaxies are in the universe.
The Universe.
Stars do not belong to a planet. They belong to the universe.
We haven't observed all of the stars in the Universe, so we don't know what is the largest yet.
the universe is constantly expanding, new stars and galaxies are coming into existence, and old stars are dying.
There are estimated to be around 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe, with each galaxy containing hundreds of billions of stars. This means that the total number of stars in the observable universe is in the order of 10^24 (1 septillion) stars.
In the VISIBLE UNIVERSE, there are somewhere in the order of 1011 galaxies; each galaxy on average has 1011 stars, for a total of (very roughly) 1022 stars.
Every point in the universe is lighted by stars.
my dick lol.inside the universe is the planets and stars and galaxies i think