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A single star with its associated planets, moons, and other celestial bodies make up a solar system level within the universe.
The eight bodies that make up the universe are the sun, planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune), moons, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, meteors, and the Kuiper Belt.
The seven elements that make up the universe are hydrogen, helium, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, iron, and silicon. These elements are the building blocks of all matter in the universe.
The most abundant gas in the universe is hydrogen. Hydrogen atoms make up about 75% of the universe's elemental mass.
Stars, Planets, nebulae, galaxies.
A single star with its associated planets, moons, and other celestial bodies make up a solar system level within the universe.
The eight bodies that make up the universe are the sun, planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune), moons, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, meteors, and the Kuiper Belt.
Hydrogen and Helium gases make up the universe.
The heavenly bodies on the universe are anything that is found in the skies and is placed there by nature. Some of the common heavenly bodies include comets and stars.
All bodies: from Supergiant stars like Deneb or Betelgeuse, galaxies, galactic clusters, and super clusters, to molecules, atoms, baryons and mesons, and quarks. All forms of matter are part of the universe.Furthermore, since mass and energy are equivalent and matter-antimatter pairs can appear spontaneously (though usually fleetingly), even energy can be considered as a "body" that makes up the universe.
The seven elements that make up the universe are hydrogen, helium, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, iron, and silicon. These elements are the building blocks of all matter in the universe.
Atoms make up most matter around us. In the Universe in general, it seems that atoms make up about 4% of the mass of the Universe. The remainder of the Universe mass is dark matter and dark energy - both of unknown composition.
The source of force behind the movement of celestial bodies in the universe is primarily gravity.
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."
The universe contains all the stars and galaxies in existence. Stars are massive celestial bodies that emit light and heat, while galaxies are vast systems of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter bound together by gravity. Together, they make up the incredible tapestry of the cosmos.
Neutrons
There are no perfect black bodies on the universe. But there are a lot of them which can be approximated (with good precision) by the black body description.