Finding more than 2,000 billion galaxies exists in the universe

The number of galaxies that exist in the universe actually reaches 2,000 billion, 20 times more than previously calculated.

This new discovery was published in the "Astronomical Journal" astronomy magazine on October 13.

British astronomers have obtained unexpected results thanks to 3D images erected from deep space images recorded by the Hubble telescope for 20 years.

Considering these images at various times in the history of the universe, along with modern learning algorithms, astronomers were able to deduce the number of "hidden" galaxies in the void. the space that the telescope captures.

Picture 1 of Finding more than 2,000 billion galaxies exists in the universe
Scientists have only discovered 10% of the bank strip that exists in the defined space of space.

However, astronomers affirmed with modern technology today, scientists only discovered 10% of the bank strip exists in the space of the defined universe, and 90% of the galaxy still still a mystery.

In fact, finding out how many galaxies in the vast universe has become a puzzle for astronomers since American astronomer Edwin Hubble in 1924 discovered Andromeda as a galaxy completely independent of the galaxy containing the planet Earth.

Even until now when astronomy with modern technical level cannot calculate this number accurately.

Through this study, astronomers discovered that the number of bank strips in a space in space was determined at a time when the new universe was several billion years old, 10 times more than today.

Explaining this decline, astronomers believe that there may have been some evolutionary process in the integration of galaxies.