= If a rectangle is 10 meters longer than its width what is its width? =
The length is 10 meters and the width is 5 meters
Measure the length and width of the room in meters. Multiply the length x width to get the area in square meters.
Width: 16 meters Length: 21 meters Check: 16+21+16+21 = 74 meters which is its perimeter
well, the width is about 17 meters and theheight is around 40 meters.
the universe is isotropic & homogeneous, meaning there is no center. the observable universe has a center, which is the part of the universe we can see. we are at the center of the observable universe.
the universe is isotropic & homogeneous, meaning there is no center. the observable universe has a center, which is the part of the universe we can see. we are at the center of the observable universe.
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.
We are at the centre of the observable universe, keyword being 'observable'.
The observable Universe has somewhere around 1011 galaxies. The entire Universe is much larger than the observable Universe, but currently, it is not known exactly how much larger. It might be infinite in size, but in any case, it is estimated that the Universe is a lot larger than the observable Universe.
Every hope and dream from every single human in the observable universe traveling at 24.5 meters per second
Yes. There are at least 90 billion trillion or more planets in the observable universe.
WikiSky will not map all 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe
There are an estimated 1011 galaxies in the observable Universe. The entire Universe is much bigger than the observable Universe. It may be infinitely bigger, but it is not currently known whether this is the case.
There are estimated to be around 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe, with each galaxy containing hundreds of billions of stars. This means that the total number of stars in the observable universe is in the order of 10^24 (1 septillion) stars.
It isn't currently known how large the Universe is. It may be thousands of times larger than the OBSERVABLE Universe, or it may even be infinite.The size of the observable Universe is hard to imagine, because the scales are much, much larger than anything we encounter in our daily lives. The diameter of the observable Universe is somewhere around 93 billion light-years (which we might round to 100 billion - 10 to the power 11 - for a quick calculation); each light-year has about ten to the power 16 meters. Multiply that together, and you get approximately 10 to the power 27 meters. That's a one, followed by 27 zeros. (This is just a rough estimate.) Once again, all this is just the observable Universe, and we don't really know how much larger the entire Universe is.
Roughly about 20%-40% of the observable universe is blocked from Earth's view by the Milky Way and other objects including galaxies. This is because the Milky Way galaxy itself occupies a significant portion of our observable sky, obstructing our view of distant regions of the cosmos.