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There Are More Stars in the Universe Than Grains of Sand on Earth

Curated by Surfaced EditorialΒ·Regularly updated

A hand releasing grains of sand that transform into glowing stars as they drift upward into a deep space background

Astronomers estimate there are roughly 200 sextillion stars in the observable universe (2 x 10^23). Earth has approximately 7.5 x 10^18 grains of sand, making stars outnumber sand grains by a factor of about 26,000.

Why It’s Interesting

Next time you hold a handful of sand at the beach, consider that the number of stars out there dwarfs every grain on every beach, desert, and riverbed on the entire planet combined. The universe is incomprehensibly vast, and we have only explored a vanishingly small fraction.

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