Type your answer here... There are 166 known moon's in the galaxy,But if you add the three Pluto has,There is 169!
There are billions of planets and moons in the Star Wars galaxy.
an infinite number
It is not known. The Andromeda Galaxy contains about a trillion stars, many of which certainly have planets, though we don't know how many. Many of the planets likely have moons. All told, there are likely several hundred billion to several trillion moons in the Andromeda Galaxy.
My galaxy, the Milky Way (which is also your galaxy; I am sure that the person asking this question is not a visitor from another galaxy) has not been examined in enough detail to say even how many planets it contains, much less how many moons orbit those planets. But given that our own solar system has numerous moons, and there are billions of other stars in the galaxy which probably also have planets and moons, at a wild guess I could estimate possibly a hundred billion moons.
Very probable this number is not known.
It's difficult to determine the exact number of moons in our galaxy, the Milky Way, as many exoplanets and their moons remain unobserved. However, estimates suggest there could be billions of moons orbiting the numerous planets in our galaxy, which contains over 100 billion stars, many of which likely have their own planetary systems. Current observations primarily focus on our solar system, where we have identified over 200 moons. The true number across the galaxy is still largely unknown and remains a subject of ongoing research.
The Andromeda galaxy, also known as M31, has at least 27 known dwarf galaxies orbiting around it, which can be considered its "moons".
No, the Andromeda Galaxy does not have any moons. Moons typically orbit around planets, not around galaxies. The Andromeda Galaxy is a spiral galaxy similar to our Milky Way and contains billions of stars but no moons.
There are about 100 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. We only know of moons in the solar system - 169 of them.
All of the ones we know about and have named are in our Galaxy.
There are lots of spiral galaxies, so you shouldn't speak about the spiral galaxy as if there were only one, and while there are lots of moons inside galaxies, you may be thinking of galaxies that have other galaxies which orbit them; our own galaxy, the Milky Way, has the Greater and Lesser Magellanic Clouds as satellite galaxies, which perhaps is what you had in mind. A satellite galaxy is not a moon, however.
The Earth's moon (there are many other moons in this galaxy) is described as being in "phases."