A galaxy. Our Milky Way galaxy is home to billions of stars, our sun being one of them.
To make you feel even smaller, there are billions of galaxies of all shapes and sizes. It is said that a galaxy more than likely has to be shaped a certain way in order to sustain life. This could be a requirement due to the gravitational center all galaxies have called a Black Hole. Yes- even at the center of the Milky Way lies a hungry Black Hole. The forces of all the stars and planents and other bodies counter the effects of the Black Hole keeping us in our perfect spot near the edge. But NOT TOO close to the edge to be subject to stellar masses that could smash us apart. -- Yea this Earth is pretty special, and quite lucky!
A "Galaxy"
There is no singular star in the center of the universe. Our universe is vast and does not have a center. Stars are spread throughout the universe in galaxies, and our sun is just one of the billions of stars in the Milky Way galaxy.
You are captain of your own universe. The Universe continues to get smaller as we learn more about space.
Yes and no, as there are a huge amount of starts. Only a few thousand stars can be seen by the naked eye. You can count those. Every star you see is in our galaxy and there are many more stars in our galaxy that you cannot, about 100 billion. Then there are billions of other galaxies. So we can estimate the amount of stars in the universe, but not count all of them.
There are estimated to be over 100 billion stars in our Milky Way galaxy alone, and there are billions of galaxies in the observable universe. It is impossible to accurately count the total number of stars in the universe.
A "Galaxy"
A galaxy contains billions of stars. A universe contains billions of galaxies.
That is a galaxy. The one we live in is called the Milky Way. There are millions of other galaxies in the universe, many of which have a spiral structure (and probably a black hole in the middle).
The universe.
No. The universe contains billions of galaxies including our own, and each galaxy contains billions of stars.
Like our galaxy contains billions of stars, the universe contains billions of galaxies.
There are only 6,000 stars in the night sky which are viewable with the naked eye. But there are billions if not trillions of stars in the universe. Remember one star in every solar systen, millions to billions of stars in each galaxy, and billions of galaxies in the universe.
Yes. A group of stars called a galaxy. One of billions in the Universe. An awesome thing it is too. Truly awesome.
There are billions of stars in the universe, far more than just 27. Stars are spread across galaxies, and each galaxy can contain billions or even trillions of stars. The universe is vast and expansive, with countless stars yet to be discovered.
Carl Sagan compared the stars to "billions upon billions of suns." He often used this analogy to convey the vastness and number of stars in the universe.
I cannot understand your question. But, the stars are billions and billions of miles away from us, except the Sun, of course. Scientists called astronomers DO name and number the stars. There is only time enough to number a tiny portion of all the stars. Just in our Milky Way galaxy there are billions of stars. Think about the fact that there are billions of other galaxies in the universe.
There is no singular star in the center of the universe. Our universe is vast and does not have a center. Stars are spread throughout the universe in galaxies, and our sun is just one of the billions of stars in the Milky Way galaxy.