We cannot be sure, of course. Estimates start at about 200 billion and go up from there. The "standard" answer has been about 400 billion for quite a while, but recent discoveries indicate that there may be many more small, invisibly-dim red dwarf and brown dwarf stars than we had previously thought.
For example, the closest star to our Sun is the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, ad 4.2 light years distance. Even that close, it is not visible to the naked eye! How many other stars that size, or even smaller, might be scattered around in the distant reaches of the Milky Way?
We once thought that our Sun was of "average" size. Now we're beginning to suspect that our Sun may be in the upper quarter of stars, just because of the potentially vast numbers of small, dim, dwarf stars.
The total number probably exceeds one trillion stars.
No one can give you an exact count, but the total number of suns in the universe is probably on the order of 1020.
i can tell that there are many galaxies beyond the milky way like magalang and matulungin
Yes - the Milky Way is just one example of the billions of galaxies in the Universe.
Yes - the Milky Way is just one example of the billions of galaxies in the Universe.
Nobody knows. We know there is lots like the Andromeda
We don't know exactly what the Milky Way is shaped like in detail, because we're inside it, but it appears to be a barred spiral galaxy, and there are many, many galaxies of that general type.Comment for the above updated answer, from another contributor.Thanks for updating my answer. However, " it appears to be" and "there are many, many galaxies of that general type", are subjective statements.
Yes.
No. There are many much larger galaxies in the Universe than the Milky Way.
There are no smaller galaxies in the Andromeda galaxy. In the Local group of galaxies to which Andromeda and the Milky Way are part of, there are around 30 smaller galaxies,
The section of the night sky where you view the milky way galaxy edge on. There are so many stars in this part of the night sky that it look like a path of spilled milk - therefore it is called the milky way., The Milky Way is the galaxy in which the solar system is located. It is a barred spiral galaxy that is part of the local group of galaxies. It is one of billions of galaxies in the observable universe.
If the milky way galaxy is 100,000 light years across and if the universe is 13 billion years old, you would have 130,000 milky way galaxies, end on end to the edge of the universe.
The section of the night sky where you view the milky way galaxy edge on. There are so many stars in this part of the night sky that it look like a path of spilled milk - therefore it is called the milky way., The Milky Way is the galaxy in which the solar system is located. It is a barred spiral galaxy that is part of the local group of galaxies. It is one of billions of galaxies in the observable universe.
Yes. The Milky Way is one galaxy of an estimated 200 billion in the known universe.