a lot
After the Milky Way galaxy, there are many other galaxies in the universe. Some of the closest galaxies to us are the Andromeda galaxy and the Triangulum galaxy. Beyond these, there are billions of other galaxies in the universe, each containing billions of stars.
From our knowledge about galaxies, we can infer that the universe is vast in size. Galaxies are massive collections of stars, dust, and dark matter, with some containing billions of stars. The sheer number and variety of galaxies observed suggest that the universe is incredibly expansive.
It means that the light from galaxies is losing energy. The only reasonable explanation for this is the cosmoligical redshift - that is, that the Universe is expanding.
An open universe is a universe where all of the galaxies and stars and everything in the universe keep expanding with nothing stopping them. This theory says that the galaxies and stars will keep going further and further from the centre of the universe until everything dies off. This is the opposite of the closed universe theory where everything will expand, and then something will cause a turning point and everything will contract until everything there ever was will fit into a space the size of the dot at the end of this sentence. Then, possibly another 'Big Bang' will happen and start everything over again. :)
Edwin Hubble proved that there are other galaxies spread throughout the universe, and that these galaxies move away from each other as the universe expands. He further found that the galaxies in the outermost areas of the universe move faster that those nearer the middle, a feature in his Hubble's Law.
The question is essentially nonsense. The universe is the universe. It contains galaxies. There's no underlying "structure" to how the galaxies fit together, so it's more or less meaningless to talk about "how they make up 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
A universe is a very big realm of darkness with galaxies in it. and there are billions of galaxies in the universe! One of those galaxies is our solar system, and in that solar system is our planet. There probably is even more then just one univserse. O_o Well... Galaxies are within the universe and a universe is defintly bigger then a galaxy
Assuming the questioner meant "how many", the present estimate is: between 100 billion and 200 billion galaxies, in the observable Universe.
there is only 1 universe and their is billions of galaxies in it !
There are about 1011 (a 1, followed by 11 zeroes) galaxies in the known Universe. It is not currently known how much bigger the entire Universe is, compared to the known Universe.
The universe contains countless galaxies, think of the universe as a galaxy of galaxies.
The universe contains countless galaxies, think of the universe as a galaxy of galaxies.
well the universe is endless, but the universe is made up of many galaxies, and galaxies are made of planets and stars and dust etc.