- Jun 18, 2002
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Astronomers say there are more stars than grains of sand in all of Earth's deserts and beaches.
That's because you have no idea how many stars there are.Originally posted by: JohnCU
I find it extremely hard to believe that there are more stars than grains of sand in the entire world.
Nice to see it verified, though.There are more stars known to exist right now than the total number of all the grains of sand on every beach in the entire world. With those kinds of odds, it would seem downright naive for someone to go to a beach in, say, some out-of-the-way inlet in Baffin Bay, stoop to pick up only one tiny grainof sand, and declare that that grain alone was the only place where life could exist.
-- Hugh Downs
Yes, I'm just a little cynicalSometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
-- Calvin
:Q !!!Originally posted by: aves2k
Astronomers say there are more stars than grains of sand in all of Earth's deserts and beaches.
:Q
Exactly. Open up your mind.Originally posted by: MacBaine
That's because you have no idea how many stars there are.Originally posted by: JohnCU
I find it extremely hard to believe that there are more stars than grains of sand in the entire world.
Like you can even accurately estimate that?!Originally posted by: aves2k
Astronomers say there are more stars than grains of sand in all of Earth's deserts and beaches.
:Q
HeheOriginally posted by: yayo
lolOriginally posted by: ndee
how did they count all the grains of sand?
One of the Powers of 10 sites around.Originally posted by: 911paramedic
While on this topic, does anybody remember that website with the multiple zoom graphics (through space) ending up on a tree leaf? Sure would like to see that again...
Count them in a small area and then apply that to all the area in the world with sand on it.Originally posted by: ndee
how did they count all the grains of sand?
So.... the sand has everywhere the same depth? How deep is the sand going down before it gets Magma?Originally posted by: FrogDog
Count them in a small area and then apply that to all the area in the world with sand on it.Originally posted by: ndee
how did they count all the grains of sand?
No clue how they did it, but I would imagine they would be able to come up with a fairly good average number for how deep it goes.Originally posted by: ndee
So.... the sand has everywhere the same depth? How deep is the sand going down before it gets Magma?Originally posted by: FrogDog
Count them in a small area and then apply that to all the area in the world with sand on it.Originally posted by: ndee
how did they count all the grains of sand?
Nooooooooot so sure about thatOriginally posted by: FrogDog
No clue how they did it, but I would imagine they would be able to come up with a fairly good average number for how deep it goes.Originally posted by: ndee
So.... the sand has everywhere the same depth? How deep is the sand going down before it gets Magma?Originally posted by: FrogDog
Count them in a small area and then apply that to all the area in the world with sand on it.Originally posted by: ndee
how did they count all the grains of sand?
Ahh... the pain of metaphor.Originally posted by: Zugzwang152
for some reason, i thought of going to the beach and getting a couple stars caught in my buttcrack.![]()
It says in the article that there are more stars in the known universe than grains of sand on Earth. So they do know the size of what they're measuring. And from there it's just a matter of, again, counting the number of stars in a relitively small chunk of area. The Cosmological Priciple says that the Universe is homogeneous over a great distance - that is, there aren't more stars in one area than another, as long each of the areas studied is big enough (about 300 megaparsecs).Originally posted by: ndee
Nooooooooot so sure about thatOriginally posted by: FrogDog
No clue how they did it, but I would imagine they would be able to come up with a fairly good average number for how deep it goes.Originally posted by: ndee
So.... the sand has everywhere the same depth? How deep is the sand going down before it gets Magma?Originally posted by: FrogDog
Count them in a small area and then apply that to all the area in the world with sand on it.Originally posted by: ndee
how did they count all the grains of sand?And how can they estimate the number of stars when they don't even know the size of the universum and also count the ones that they can't see?