That is a difficult question to fully answer as types of galaxies are not fully defined.
A ball park figure would be dwarf galaxies, or spiral galaxies depending on the area in question.
See related question for a full breakdown.
1 kilometre = 1000 metres. You now have all the information required to answer this and similar questions.
Yes, most galaxies contain billions of stars. For instance, our Milky Way galaxy is estimated to have around 100 to 400 billion stars. However, there are smaller galaxies, known as dwarf galaxies, that may contain as few as a few million stars. Despite this variation, the majority of galaxies are star-rich and typically hold vast numbers of stars.
Actually, most galaxies are all moving away from all other galaxies, not just from ours. The exception is the Andromeda galaxy, with which the Milky Way is on a collision course.
The Milky Way Galaxy and about 17 other galaxies within 3 million light-years are collectively known as the Local Group. This group includes galaxies such as Andromeda (M31), Triangulum (M33), and the Milky Way.
Yes, all galaxies have gravity. Gravity is a fundamental force that exists everywhere in the universe, including within and between galaxies. It is responsible for holding galaxies together, as well as determining their structure and motion.
0.75
About 60% of galaxies are classified as elliptical planets.
The collection of all visible or detectable galaxies is known as the universe. Each galaxy is a vast collection of stars--billions of them. Some galaxies have trillions of stars.
It is impossible to list them all. There are 100 billion galaxies in the known universe, each containing millions to trillions of stars.
It's not known to any degree of accuracy, but about 66% of all spiral galaxies are barred and about 60% of galaxies in the local Universe are spiral galaxies.
Peggy had three times as many quarters as nickels. She had $1.60 in all. How many nickels and how many quarters did she have?
There are three types of galaxies, all of which are the same, with the exception of their shapes. There are the Elliptical galaxies (football-shaped) the Spiral galaxies (like the Milky way; vortex-shaped) and Irregular galaxies (all shapes other than spiral and football shaped).
Not at all. One half is more than a third but less than three quarters.
No. As of 2013 HyperLeda contains a database of about 3 million objects, about half of which are known to be galaxies.
Your stroke allowance will still be 0 as three quarters of nothing is nothing.If your handicap was plus 1 then three quarters would be plus 1 and you would give one shot at the hole that is stroke index 18.
All stars and galaxies are in the universe.
About 80% are metals.