- “I’ve heard that there are more stars in our Universe than there are grains of sand on all the beaches on Earth. Is this possible?” Awesome question, and a great excuse to do some maths.
- .. There are 100 to 400 billion stars in the Milky Way and more than 100 billion galaxies in the Universe – maybe as many as 500 billion. If you multiply stars by galaxies, at the low end, you get 10 billion billion stars, or 10 sextillion stars in the Universe – a 1 followed by 22 zeros. At the high end, it’s 200 sextillion.
- These are mind-bogglingly huge numbers. How do they compare to the number of grains of sand on the collective beaches of an entire planet? This type of sand measures about a half millimeter across.
- You could put 20 grains of sand packed in side-by-side to make a centimeter. 8000 grains in one cubic centimeter. If you took 10 sextillion grains of sand, put them into a ball, it would have a radius of 10.6 kilometers. {6. miles} And for the high end of our estimate, 200 sextillion, it would be 72 kilometers across. {45 miles}
- When it comes to atoms ...a single grain of sand has more atoms than there are stars in the Universe.
- source another
- At least some of the billions of stars will have orbiting planets, even moons, which might accommodate life, even intellligent life.
- When you read about them you realise that it will be thousands, perhaps millions of years before humanity could travel the distances involved.
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