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2007-04-22 21:56:03 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

Just wanted you to think about it. I read 10¹¹³; even with two trillion atoms to a cell, and two trillion cells to a person, one hundred billion stars to a galaxy, and one hundred billion galaxies. Amazing ain't it.

2007-04-23 08:42:16 · update #1

9 answers

An ultra-rough estimate: the mass of the (observable) universe is something like 10^52 kg, and the mass of a hydrogen atom is around 10^-27 kg... so, somewhere around 10^79 atoms in the observable universe.

2007-04-22 22:05:29 · answer #1 · answered by Robert 1 · 0 0

Well you can't just count how many atoms are there in the universe. I mean a single object can have millions of atoms and you are talking of the universe. Countless I should say.

2007-04-22 22:04:10 · answer #2 · answered by Ankit Kumar 3 · 0 0

sad but i read this last night in a book
aproximately 10^78 atoms

2007-04-22 22:04:54 · answer #3 · answered by colin p 3 · 0 0

Many that you cannot ever finish counting!It wil have more than a trillion!

2007-04-22 23:17:14 · answer #4 · answered by Joe 1 · 0 0

if everything in the universe becomes ink to write that number we still need more ink.

2007-04-22 22:05:37 · answer #5 · answered by sana 2 · 1 0

In technical terms, a sh!tload...

2007-04-22 23:16:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

One less than infinity.

2007-04-22 21:58:04 · answer #7 · answered by Barb Outhere 7 · 0 1

All of them!

2007-04-22 21:58:48 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

sandler,rich,ant,west..... at least 4

2007-04-22 21:59:27 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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