Just curious. . . . how many stars are there?
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Just curious. . . . how many stars are there?
Just curious, what is the theorized number of stars there are in our universe?
Thanks.
Thanks.
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Note that's given as the high end figure, though.Bertie Wooster wrote:Roughly 10^24
According to these folks:
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEM75BS1VED_index_0.html
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And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! -- Asuka
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I couldn't tell from the article if that was only observable galaxies, or a projected figure of galaxies for the entire universe.Bertie Wooster wrote:Roughly 10^24
According to these folks:
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEM75BS1VED_index_0.html
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Okay, so we have a couple of "ballpark" numbers ranging from 7,000 (visible from terra firma) to as much as 10^24.
The reason why I ask is that, in the OT, God asked if Abraham could count the stars in the sky, . . . so would his decendence be. So if that meant the visible stars that can be seen from the earth, . . . . . not a very impressive number. If it is all the stars, . . . . . . is that even possible? I know there are some 6 billion people on earth, but it seems unlikely that there have been 10^24 number of people who have lived (according to the YEC people) for the past 6,000 years!
The reason why I ask is that, in the OT, God asked if Abraham could count the stars in the sky, . . . so would his decendence be. So if that meant the visible stars that can be seen from the earth, . . . . . not a very impressive number. If it is all the stars, . . . . . . is that even possible? I know there are some 6 billion people on earth, but it seems unlikely that there have been 10^24 number of people who have lived (according to the YEC people) for the past 6,000 years!
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However, we could, using a logistics equation, derive when Armageddon will occur! Since 10^24 appears to be the upper limit, there can be no more than 1e24 descendents of Abraham; thus, at that point, God will return. How long do we have?
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Good thinking, Surlethe! Someone do the math!Surlethe wrote:However, we could, using a logistics equation, derive when Armageddon will occur! Since 10^24 appears to be the upper limit, there can be no more than 1e24 descendents of Abraham; thus, at that point, God will return. How long do we have?
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Impossible to calculate as the further down we go the family tree the more descendents of Abraham there are in a single generation.Surlethe wrote:However, we could, using a logistics equation, derive when Armageddon will occur! Since 10^24 appears to be the upper limit, there can be no more than 1e24 descendents of Abraham; thus, at that point, God will return. How long do we have?
Add the fact that the number of descendents in any given family is not fixed...
Assuming 20 years per generation, that every generation was 6 billion people (which is patently untrue) AND that every single human being on Earth is a descendent of Abraham I get three and a third quadrillion years from Abraham becoming a daddy. So it seems that even if creationists are right about the age of Earth we have a little time left.
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There are about 10^11 stars in an average galaxy like our own, and there are at least that number of galaxies in the universe as well that have been observed, so that gives roughly 10^24.
KG
KG
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Michael Shermer threw 100 billion around in one of his "Skeptic" articles in Scientific American.Zadius wrote:No, I was mistaken. It was 1/6th of the people who have lived in the last 6,000 years, not all time.
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TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet
And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! -- Asuka
TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet
And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! -- Asuka
I don't have a Bible in front of me, but my 'gut reaction' to that passage is that the answer to God's rhetorical question was meant to be "No, Abraham, you can't count them all. So will your descendents be." I know, I know, where's the fun in that. On with the calcs.Magnetic wrote:Okay, so we have a couple of "ballpark" numbers ranging from 7,000 (visible from terra firma) to as much as 10^24.
The reason why I ask is that, in the OT, God asked if Abraham could count the stars in the sky, . . . so would his decendence be. So if that meant the visible stars that can be seen from the earth, . . . . . not a very impressive number. If it is all the stars, . . . . . . is that even possible?
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Correct. . . the answer to the rhetorical would be, in fact, "no." But if the "so shall your decendents be" was NOT rhetorical, then we have a problem in terms of numbers . . . . . .both ways (whether visible stars, or all of the stars).Raw Shark wrote:I don't have a Bible in front of me, but my 'gut reaction' to that passage is that the answer to God's rhetorical question was meant to be "No, Abraham, you can't count them all. So will your descendents be." I know, I know, where's the fun in that. On with the calcs.Magnetic wrote:Okay, so we have a couple of "ballpark" numbers ranging from 7,000 (visible from terra firma) to as much as 10^24.
The reason why I ask is that, in the OT, God asked if Abraham could count the stars in the sky, . . . so would his decendence be. So if that meant the visible stars that can be seen from the earth, . . . . . not a very impressive number. If it is all the stars, . . . . . . is that even possible?
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It may be closer to 10^12, but our galaxy is a giant among giants in that regard. The number of galaxies is way into the Lots range:kheegan wrote:There are about 10^11 stars in an average galaxy like our own, and there are at least that number of galaxies in the universe as well that have been observed, so that gives roughly 10^24.
KG
I do remember a bit of commentary that the Hubble Photo of the Tadpole galaxy revealed over six thousand new galaxies, and the image itself covered a total area of about a tentth of the Moon.
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You probably mean the Hubble Deep Field:Xeriar wrote:
I do remember a bit of commentary that the Hubble Photo of the Tadpole galaxy revealed over six thousand new galaxies, and the image itself covered a total area of about a tentth of the Moon.
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I always heard it was 8,000 total in both hemisphere on a dark, moonless night with no ambient light nearby. That would be 4000 per hemisphere, far less if there is any other sort of illumination nearby.Elheru Aran wrote:IIRC, the number of stars visible to the human eye from any given hemisphere of the Earth during night is roughly seven thousand or so. Don't quote me on that, though...
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