i cant tell you exactly but i can tell you that.........
in our galaxy there are 10,000 advanced communicating alien civilizations. [according to drake's equation]. 70% of all yellow stars have planets
23.98% of all red giants have planets
78% of white dwarfs, pulsars and brown dwarfs have planets
and red supergiants, supernova, and red dwarfs 56%
which leads us to think there are probably 6205^23489 alien ,slightly intelligent alien life forms in 100 galaxies or 20 million in each galaxy. hope that helped, but don't go out with your telescope yet. because you'll have to search 3,000 stars before you find one with communicating advanced civilized life.
There are no known alien civilizations in our universe.
at least 12,600 trillion or more. For now, it is unknown.
There are over 10,000 trillion alien races/civilizations (100,000+ per galaxy; excluding humans) in the Outlaw Star Universe.
There are over 10,000 trillion alien races/civilizations (100,000+ per galaxy; excluding humans) in the Code Lyoko Universe.
There are over 10,000 trillion alien races/civilizations (100,000+ per galaxy; excluding humans) in the Titan AE Universe.
There are 2 (no, no, 3...)... The human race and people who ask this stuff on wiki answers (and people who answer this stupid answer....
If you counted 1 intelligent alien civilization per second, it would take 400 million years to count all 12,600 trillion intelligent alien civilizations in the universe.
There are over 10,000 trillion alien races/civilizations (100,000+ per galaxy; excluding humans) in the Damocles Universe (the universe Sigma, the qeelocke, Damocles, the Sword, and One-Eyed Jack's crew originated in).
There is absolutely know way of knowing. So far we only intelligent civilization that we know of is our own. We have no idea of how common life is in the universe, let alone intelligent life. The number is probably too high for the observable universe. If there are 12.6 quadrillion civilizations in the observable universe of 100 billion galaxies, that gives us an average of 126,000 civilizations for an average galaxy. Since our galaxy has more stars than most that would suggest that there are several hundred thousand civilizations in the Milky Way, perhaps over a million. Suggesting so many civilizations exist in our galaxy would invoke the question of Fermi's paradox: where is everybody?
Yes, ancient Egyptians believed that the earth was the center of the universe and that the sun, moon, and stars revolved around it. This geocentric view of the universe was common in many ancient civilizations before the heliocentric model was accepted.
Earth is probably the center of attention in the universe and the Mother is telling us what her agenda has been and is for the event that so many civilizations are undoubtedly watching.
Those are the ruins of ancient, advanced civilizations that rose in Mexico and Central America from 3000 BC until contact with Europeans on the 16th century. These civilizations included the Maya, the Aztec, the Olmec and the Teotihuacan, among many others.