I don't think the number is well-known. 2000 are known in the Milky Way; there are probably much more.
nobody knows
There are about 33% F type stars in our Milky Way.
Population II stars are the oldest in our Milky Way. Population III stars were the first stars in the Universe, but have yet to be discovered. See related question
no the no. of stars in the milky way is not the evidence in support of the big bang cosmology.
The Milky Way
yes.............
small GRB are believed to come from binary neutron stars, however, there have been none observed in the Milkyway.
the milky way is a galaxy, there are billions of stars in the milky way galaxy
in milky way there are about 2,500 stars
All the stars we see with the unaided eye are part of the Milky Way. Many of the brighter ones have names.All the stars we see with the unaided eye are part of the Milky Way. Many of the brighter ones have names.All the stars we see with the unaided eye are part of the Milky Way. Many of the brighter ones have names.All the stars we see with the unaided eye are part of the Milky Way. Many of the brighter ones have names.
There are about 100 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. We only know of moons in the solar system - 169 of them.
Well, the Milky Way doesn't only include stars but it includes planets too.
The entire solar system is in the milky way, with all the stars you can see.
Yes, there are young stars in the Milky Way Galaxy.
The Milky Way is a huge group of stars, somewhere between 200 and 400 billion stars. The stars themselves, or the Milky Way in its entirety, is not in line with anything.
trillions of other stars in the milkyway
There are about 33% F type stars in our Milky Way.
All the stars you see are part of the Milky Way, and so are we. So you could say they are the same distance. There is a particular patch through the sky which we particularly refer to as the Milky Way, and there are many stars that are nearer to us than that.