Current estimates are in the region of 100 billion. Probably much more
No; the two are quite different. The Universe is everything we can see; it contains many galaxies.
No. The universe contains billions of galaxies including our own, and each galaxy contains billions of stars.
The universe comprises all matter in space. This includes a very large number (200 billion to 2 trillion) galaxies. Each galaxy comprises a very large number of stars: our contains 100 thousand million stars.
No, it's the other way. The OBSERVABLE Universe has roughly 10 to the power 11 galaxies; the entire Universe is believed to be much, much larger, though nobody knows for sure how large exactly.
We don't actually know - because we cannot see the universe beyond a certain point due to the fact that we are in it. We have named the cluster of galaxies we are in the Virgo Cluster but there are many other clusters and lone galaxies as well. So we'll probably never know that answer!
The vast expanse of the universe contains many objects and phenomena, such as stars, planets, galaxies, and dark matter. So, it is not accurate to say that nothing exists in the universe.
There are an estimated 1011 (100 billion) galaxies in the observable Universe. It is not known how much bigger the Universe is, compared to the observable part.
500
There are about 1011 galaxies on the observable Universe. The actual Universe is much bigger, but nobody knows how much bigger. Answer2: Thee are >1012 galaxies in the universe.
60000
It is estimated that there are about 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe. However, the total number of galaxies in the entire universe could be much larger and currently unknown. The universe is vast and constantly expanding, so the exact number of galaxies it can hold is difficult to determine.
Assuming the questioner meant "how many", the present estimate is: between 100 billion and 200 billion galaxies, in the observable Universe.