There are approximately 100 billion galaxies in the known Universe.
Yes, because scientists have found hundreds and hundreds of galaxies already and scientists say that there are more galaxies out there that they haven't found!
WikiSky will be unable to map all the 100 billion galaxies in the universe considering that there are most likely more than 100 billion galaxies.
WikiSky will be unable to map all the 100 billion galaxies in the universe, considering that there are most likely more than 100 billion galaxies.
according to Astronomy there are about more than 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe.
according to Astronomy there are about more than 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe.
A so-called "great wall", which is a block of galaxies more than a billion light-years long.
Yes. There is an estimated 1011 (a hundred billion) galaxies in the observable Universe.
More galaxies (100 billion of them).
ore than a million. A galaxy with tens of millions of starts would be considered small. Out own galaxy has 200 billion to 400 billion stars. Some galaxies may contain more than 100 trillion stars.
You don't. That's way too much. You just get the redshift of a sample of galaxies. As a clarification, the current estimate is about 170 billion galaxies - and that refers to the "observable Universe". The entire Universe is expected to be much larger than that (and have many more galaxies), but those can never be observed.
scientifically speaking, yes
The estimated number of satellite galaxies, given that there are 100 billion galaxies in the universe, is 170 billion.