Visible with the naked eye - about 8 to 9 depending on viewing conditions. (Not all from the same viewing spot)
With estimation, anywhere between 100 and 300 billion, at distances up to 13 billion light years.
Yes, there are many galaxies in the universe. Some of the others are visible from earth.
Yes, the current Dwarf galaxies in the visible universe are 7 trillion.
In the VISIBLE UNIVERSE, there are somewhere in the order of 1011 galaxies; each galaxy on average has 1011 stars, for a total of (very roughly) 1022 stars.
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.
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
a lot
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.
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
Every star is a sun. There seem to be several hundred billions (several times 1011) in our galaxy alone; there are about as many (1011) similar galaxies in the visible Universe.
60000
Assuming the questioner meant "how many", the present estimate is: between 100 billion and 200 billion galaxies, in the observable Universe.