The amount of planets in spore is somewhere around 2000. But these planets are different than you friends' planets. And the planets will evolve over time, say: You place a creature on a planet, and one week later you visit the planet and you'll see that he has started colonies etc. etc. And all the textures and everything on the planets in the beginning are randomly made, so there'll be something different VERYWHERE!
actually it's WAY more than that. i read that there is over 50,000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! the grox alone control 2400 solar systems
The number of stars in our galaxy is a few hundred billion. You probably refer to the number of stars that have planets; it is known that many stars in our neighborhood have planets, but it is yet too early to give even an approximate percentage. It is possible that most stars have planets, but this can't be stated for sure, from the available data.The number of stars in our galaxy is a few hundred billion. You probably refer to the number of stars that have planets; it is known that many stars in our neighborhood have planets, but it is yet too early to give even an approximate percentage. It is possible that most stars have planets, but this can't be stated for sure, from the available data.The number of stars in our galaxy is a few hundred billion. You probably refer to the number of stars that have planets; it is known that many stars in our neighborhood have planets, but it is yet too early to give even an approximate percentage. It is possible that most stars have planets, but this can't be stated for sure, from the available data.The number of stars in our galaxy is a few hundred billion. You probably refer to the number of stars that have planets; it is known that many stars in our neighborhood have planets, but it is yet too early to give even an approximate percentage. It is possible that most stars have planets, but this can't be stated for sure, from the available data.
It is not known. Scientists are still not sure how many dwarf planets are in the solar system or how many true planets are in the galaxy. If estimates from our solar system apply elsewhere, however, the number is probably in the trillions.
a galaxy :) _________________________ A stellar "cluster" would also be accurate. There are a great number of clusters of different types in the galaxy. Or, for a non-astronomical answer, "a dictionary".
Pluto is no longer classified as a planet, but as a new type of object called a dwarf planet. There are three planets in out solar system orbiting beyond Pluto: Haumea, Makemake, and Eris. None of these were ever classified as planets. Outside our solar system there are over 1,050 known planets orbiting other stars in the Galaxy. The total number of planets in the Galaxy is estimated to be 100 billion to 400 billion.
Yes! a number of stars in our galaxy are now believed to have their own planetary systems. We have till date found large gaseous planets very similar to our Jupiter. However recent findings also include rocky planets like mars and earth.Yes there are.
in the world, there are zero galaxies, so the answer is grains of sand. if your actual question was about the number of galaxies in the universe: there are more galaxies in 1% of 1/10 of the visible sky than on all the beaches of all the worlds oceans
Out of the planets in our Solar System, Jupiter has the most moons. It has 63 confirmed moons.
That is currently unknown. However, based on the planets found so far it seems there are at least as many planets as stars. Current estimates suggest 100 billion to 400 billion planets in our galaxy.
There are no confirmed life forms on other planets. However, the possibility of life on other planets is very real. The number of stars with terrestrial planets in the Habitable Zone in our galaxy alone is immense. Given that number, up to 50 billion, multiplied by the possibility of millions of millions of galaxies makes it remarkably probable that life exists somewhere else.
Probably. Astronomers estimated that there are at least 100 billion planets in the galaxy, a good number of which may be similar to Earth. It seems pretty unlikely that Earth would be the only planet to develop life.
No-one can possibly know for sure, but the answer is probably billions. There are hundreds of billions of stars in our own Milky Way galaxy, many of which have solar systems of their own, and as many galaxies in the Universe as there are stars in our own galaxy (and the Milky Way is by no means a particularly large galaxy, just of average size). If you take all of this into account, the number of planets likely to be in the universe would be many billion.
Our galaxy has over 200 billion stars; many of them do have planets, and thus qualify as a "solar system". As to the total number, we will never know, as solar systems will live and die. As a rough guess, at least 50% of all stars should have planets - so that could be classified as a "Solar System".