1.Northern
2.Equatorial
3.Southern
They used a method called "representative sampling" to obtain their estimate. The sky is divided into sections of equal size and the number of galaxies in one section are counted. The count from that one section is then multiplied by the total number of sections in the sky
True
Mars Venus and Saturn
It can be found in all, but you will find different clouds in different sections.
Almost. A constellation is a group of stars that visually relate to one another, and have hence been given a name, based on their apparent pictorial appearance. I don't think you can include "separates the sky into definite sections", as several constellations overlap (Pegasus and Andromeda, for example) and some constellations take up a tiny part of the sky, some a huge chunk of it - which would be a rather awkward way of dividing up into "definite sections".
Troposphere, stratosphere and mesosphere
Yes, it divided into three parts.
A Petrarchean sonnet is divided into two sections, an octave and a sestet, whereas a Shakespearean sonnet is divided into four sections, three quatrains and a couplet.
Three: head, thorax, abdomen. The same as you.
A circle divided into three sections by three curved lines, from the circumfrance to the centre point: rather like a yin-yang with three sections.
MSDS is divided into 16 sections
The small Intestine.
Exposition (often repeated), development, recapitulation, coda.
They used a method called "representative sampling" to obtain their estimate. The sky is divided into sections of equal size and the number of galaxies in one section are counted. The count from that one section is then multiplied by the total number of sections in the sky
They used a method called "representative sampling" to obtain their estimate. The sky is divided into sections of equal size and the number of galaxies in one section are counted. The count from that one section is then multiplied by the total number of sections in the sky
9 sections
upper body 40% middle body 40% lower body 20%