We strongly suspect that every other solar system will be different, probably RADICALLY different, from our own. Every star is a little different; the mass that coalesced to form the solar system is different, and the unimaginably random factors that caused each solar system to form as it did - those are also different.
The same as the other ones solar systems.
Most likely not, billions of other stars have been destroyed. The odds that our solar systems sun in the key to the universe being stable is very unlikely. So, the short answer is, "Probably Not".
No!
There are many solar systems in the galaxy only none of them are the same, they coild be very similar to each other sometimes but they are not the same.
The solar system is only a small part of a galaxy. The Milky Way, galazy in which our solar system is found, has other solar systems.
The same as "zodiacal light", but for other star systems - i.e., outside of our own Solar System.
No they are different, the universe refers the whole of space, plants ,stars, solar system galaxy..., where as the solar system is the name we give a single star with planets revolving around it.
same way they do at day.
No, the solar system is just the same give to the system of planets which orbit the Sun. There are millions of similar systems in this galaxy and there are millions of galaxies in the universe.
he thought that the universe and the solar system was the same thing but know we now that they are to separate things
Not necessarily! System with one sun (star) at its centre is called solar system. A solar system may have anything. Our solar system has, of course eight planets, asteriods, comets. But any other solar system in the cosmos may have different things,
It seems that the Universe has no center. It is generally believed that the Universe looks roughly the same way wherever you are; wherever you are, it looks as if you are at the center.