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The ratio of Italian hoagies sold to the total number of hoagies sold is X:Y, where X represents the number of Italian hoagies sold and Y represents the total number of hoagies sold.
The total number of possible outcomes is the product of the number of values for each event.
The formula for calculating the percentage of germination is: Number of germinated seeds / Total number of seeds planted x 100. This formula allows you to determine the percentage of seeds that have successfully germinated out of the total number of seeds planted.
To display the total number of records in an opened table, you can use the SQL query: SELECT COUNT(*) FROM [table_name]. This query will return the total number of records present in the specified table.
A running total of the number of people surveyed is called a cumulative total. It represents the sum of all the individual responses or data points collected up to that point in the survey.
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.
The exact number of stars in the universe is not definitively known, but estimates suggest there are around 100 billion to 400 billion stars in our Milky Way galaxy alone. Beyond that, there are billions of other galaxies, each containing billions of stars. Overall, the total number of stars in the observable universe is estimated to be around 1 septillion (1 followed by 24 zeros).
The exact number of stars in the universe is not precisely known, but estimates suggest there are around 100 billion to 400 billion stars in our Milky Way galaxy alone. When considering the estimated 2 trillion galaxies in the observable universe, the total number of stars could be as high as 1 septillion (10^24) or more. However, these figures are approximations and the true number remains a subject of ongoing research in astronomy.
There are an estimated 100 to 200 billion galaxies.Scientists estimate that our Galaxy (The Milky Way) contains 200 to 400 billion stars.So taking a conservative number of 100 billion stars per galaxy, gives an approximate total of 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars. (which is 10 sextillion)It is unknown. The Milky Way galaxy contains an estimated 200 billion stars and there are an estimated 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe. However, our galaxy is significantly larger than most. That said, if we assume the average galaxy has 10 billion stars then we arrive at an estimate of 1,000 billion billion stars, or about 1 sextillion stars.
If the information is correct, [See related question] then there are more stars in the Universe.There is an estimated 100 billion galaxies in the observable (note observable) Universe, and say 100 billion stars per galaxy.This gives a total of about 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars or 1 x 1022 or 10 Sextillion.
There are a number of ways to count these - based on actual catalogs of the observed universe, based on estimates of the observed universe and based on estimates of the entire universe. The actual catalogs (there are numerous ones) have name around 10,000 galaxies. The best quantified amount is the estimate of the observed universe which according to the National Geographic Encyclopedia of Space contains 125 billion. Estimates of the entire universe have gone as far as 300-500 billion.
It is estimated that there are about 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe. However, the total number of galaxies in the entire universe could be much larger and currently unknown. The universe is vast and constantly expanding, so the exact number of galaxies it can hold is difficult to determine.
Infinite and Unknown. But I think the point is "night sky" meaning, OUR night sky, or our visual field here on Earth. It's not a question of how many stars are in the universe. The answer depends on your location and the brightness of ambient terrestrial lights but can be as many as 13,000.
In the observable UNiverse there are somewhere in the order of 1011 galaxies, a typical galaxy might have 1011 stars, and it seems likely that most stars have planets and would therefore qualify as "solar systems". That makes for a total of roughly 1022 stars or solar systems (that is a one, followed by 22 zeroes), just in the observable Universe. Note that the total Universe is probably much larger, but it isn't currently know how much larger. All of the above are rough estimates, of course.
Yes, stars do eventually burn out and die, decreasing the overall number of stars in the universe. However, new stars continue to form through processes like stellar birth in nebulae, so the total number of stars in the universe remains relatively constant on a larger scale.
Our own galaxy has between 100 and 400 billion stars; there are hundreds of billions of similar galaxies in the OBSERVABLE Universe, and it is believed that the entire Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe (how much bigger, is not known). It seems that at least a large percentage of those stars have planets, which means they can be called "solar systems".
Theoretically, enough of the formula behind it could be stored so that pieces of it could be calculated. For example, if you just wanted to look at the last ten digits or something like that. However, the entire number is far to big to be stored in perfect precision by any computer that has ever existed or ever will exist. How can I say "ever will exist"? Because, even written in scientific notation, i.e. with only one digit of precision, the number of digits in the exponent would exceed the number of atoms in the observable universe. The total number is easily larger than the number of Planck volumes into which the observable universe can be divided. If the whole observable universe were a computer, and every tiny quark and neutrino represented a bit of data, it could not store the entire number in absolute precision. And better observational equipment would not help expand the observable universe into a larger computer, since, at this level, the observable universe is bound not so much by our technology, but rather by the speed of light itself. So, the short answer to your question is "No."