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    Thats breathtaking. Unbeliveable views.
    *Except Michael, who died.

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      Originally posted by Darkon View Post
      http://gizmodo.com/5847467/is-this-t...apse-video-yet

      Not strictly a picture, but well worth the watch IMO
      Thanks for posting that, it's one of the most beautiful videos I've seens online. How lucky are people who get to view the Milky Way like that on a regular basis

      Comment


        Ah ****, I knew I shouldn't have done that. Googled Milky Way and now my brain is going to be a useless mush again for the foreseeable future.

        200-400 billions stars in the Milky Way alone, and there's probably 200 billion galaxies all containing roughly that amount

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          Remember the space program Sam Neill did? He said -

          "For every grain of sand, there are a billion stars..."

          Comment


            Cheers, boss!

            That's the EXACT sort of thing that's going to stop me getting any sleep at all tonight

            Comment


              Oh bugger. I had to go and Google that too

              I can't look at a bag of sand now, let alone think about the Sahara desert x 100


              ""So how many grains of sand are there in the world? You could start
              off by trying to guess how many grains of sand there are in a spoon of
              sand. Use a magnifying glass to count how many grains fit in a small
              section. Then, count how many of those sections fit in your spoon.
              Multiply the two numbers together to get an estimate.
              "Using this same principle, plus some additional information,
              mathematicians at the University of Hawaii tried to guess how many
              grains of sand are on the world's beaches. They came up with
              7,500,000,000,000,000,000, or seven quintillion five quadrillion
              grains of sand."
              How many grains of sand are in the world?


              The calculation is detailed here:


              That number is 7.5 x 10^18 or 7.5 billion billion.

              How many stars, galaxies, clusters, QSO's etc. in the Universe?

              "To get the total stellar population in the Milky Way [that is, in our
              galaxy alone], we must take the number of luminous stars that we can
              see at large distances and assume that we know how many fainter stars
              go along with them. Recent numbers give about 400,000,000,000 (400
              billion) stars, but a 50% error either way is quite plausible."

              So in our galaxy alone, there might be between 2 x 10^11 and 6 x 10^11 stars

              How many galaxies in the Universe?

              "the Hubble telescope is capable of detecting about 80 billion
              galaxies (although not all of these within the foreseeable future!).
              In fact, there must be many more than this, even within the observable
              Universe, since the most
              common kind of galaxy in our own neighborhood is the faint dwarfs
              which are difficult enough to see nearby, much less at large
              cosmological distances. For example, in our own local group, there are
              3 or 4 giant galaxies which would be detectable at a billion
              light-years or more (Andromeda, the Milky Way, the Pinwheel in
              Triangulum, and maybe the Large Magellanic Cloud). However, there are
              at least another 20 faint members, which would be difficult to find at
              100 million light-years, much less the billions of light years to
              which the brightest galaxies can be seen."

              So the lower end estimate for the number of galaxies is 8 x 10^10

              If we accept even the lower end of these Hubble figures, and if our
              Milky Way has a typical number of stars in it, that puts the number of
              stars in the universe to be at least
              (2 x 10^11) x (8 x 10^10) = 16 x 10^ 21

              So if we round the number of sand grains to, say, 10^20
              and round the number of stars to, say 10^22
              then there are at least 100 stars in the universe for every grain of sand on earth.

              As you say, that's a *LOT*

              Search terms used
              beach sand particles cubic
              "number of stars in the universe

              Thanks again for your interesting question
              Richard-ga"

              Comment


                This image of Hubble Deep Field blows my mind,an area of the sky that is the size of your thumbnail contains all these galaxies, each with millions of suns probably with several planets per sun.

                Then add into the equation that what you are looking at is an image that is over 10billion years old, the light has taken that long to get here

                My mind cannot get to grips with the numbers, distances and time



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                  That's so ****ing frightening. The little yellow swirl in the bottom could be a Milky Way sized galaxy and that only covers a minute area of the entire sky.

                  Ow, my head

                  Comment


                    For Norbert -

                    Watch when it get to about 1:00, and apologies for the music...

                    [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnzwVHxtHws&feature=related"]Hubble Deep Field Zoom & Pan - YouTube[/ame]

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                        Cheers

                        Subby

                        www.lewcose.com Diabetes technology to make life easier

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                          NOM
                          Cheers

                          Subby

                          www.lewcose.com Diabetes technology to make life easier

                          www.subbytech.com - Use your "est" discount code to get 15% off everything in the store too

                          MetalliGear Neo Qube : Ryzen 7950x : x870 Tomahawk : 32GIG DDR5 6000Mhz : Sapphire 7900 : 850w G2 : CableMod custom cables : Win 11 : Subbytech.com

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                            Kids test....

                            Cheers

                            Subby

                            www.lewcose.com Diabetes technology to make life easier

                            www.subbytech.com - Use your "est" discount code to get 15% off everything in the store too

                            MetalliGear Neo Qube : Ryzen 7950x : x870 Tomahawk : 32GIG DDR5 6000Mhz : Sapphire 7900 : 850w G2 : CableMod custom cables : Win 11 : Subbytech.com

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                              Cheers

                              Subby

                              www.lewcose.com Diabetes technology to make life easier

                              www.subbytech.com - Use your "est" discount code to get 15% off everything in the store too

                              MetalliGear Neo Qube : Ryzen 7950x : x870 Tomahawk : 32GIG DDR5 6000Mhz : Sapphire 7900 : 850w G2 : CableMod custom cables : Win 11 : Subbytech.com

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                                Sack swinging like Dub-D40 on a door hinge

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