Well considering stars die and are born all the time, the number would change all the time.
However, at the current estimate of 300 billion stars. At one a second a star, it would take about 9,500 years.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take nearly 13,000 years to count all 400 billion stars in the Star Wars galaxy.
It would take an incredibly long time to count all the stars in the Andromeda galaxy, as there are estimated to be around 1 trillion stars in that galaxy. If we assume you could count one star per second without breaks, it would take about 30,000 years to count them all.
400 billion seconds. (almost thirteen thousand years) By the way there are probably no more than 200 billion stars in our galaxy...
You can count the stars, bu it is as hopeless as tryin to count all the grains of sand in the Sahara Desert. So in other word youcna count stars but you can't. In our galaxy we have 100 billion stars and there are a 100 billion galaxies, at least.
There are a lot of stars in the universe. Our Galaxy alone is thought to contain 400 billion stars. If you can count 2 stars a second continuously without sleep it would take 200 billion seconds or 6337 years 225 days 13 hours 33 minutes and 20 seconds.Add to that the fact that there is thought to be about 400 billion galaxies in our universe. Our Galaxy is large by galaxy standards but let us assume that the average number of stars in any given galaxy is 100 billion. So at 2 a second it would take 633.7 trillion years or to put it into perspective 46,154.4 times longer than the universe has thought to existed.
No count of stars in any galaxy has been made. Estimates are given.Galaxies can contain as little as a few million stars or as many as trillions.NGC 1427A. A few billion maybe.
A galaxy is by a definition a group of stars. If there were no stars it could not be a galaxy.
Every galaxy contains stars, if that's what you mean. "Galaxy" means "big bunch of stars". No stars ===> no galaxy.
A lot of time (period of a few human lives) and a good counter, but my opinion is that you can't count them, because there are billions of stars in a galaxy and billions of galaxies in the universe.
Yes, stars are countable. However, estimating the exact number of stars in the universe is a challenging task due to the vastness of the cosmos. Scientists believe there are billions of stars in our galaxy alone, and billions of galaxies in the observable universe.
Elliptical Galaxy The Elliptical Galaxy has mostly old stars and blue stars are new stars.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take 4000 trillion months (320 trillion years) to count all 10 billion trillion stars (100 billion per galaxy) in a fictitious version of our universe.