No, the vast majority of stars are outside the Milky Way galaxy. However, most of the stars we can actually see as individual stars are in the Milky Way. About the only exception is supernovae ... those are so bright that we can distinguish them even in other galaxies.
All stars and constellations that we can see are in the Milky Way galaxy.
Yes it is, as all stars that you can see with the naked eye are in the Milky Way galaxy.
All stars you can see are in the Milky Way Galaxy.
All named stars are within the Milky Way galaxy. In fact all individual stars are within the Milky Way galaxy.
The Sun, a couple of billion other stars are all contained in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Bellatrix is in the same galaxy that we are in: the Milky Way. All the stars you see at night are in the Milky Way.
Yes. All the stars you see at night are in the Milky Way galaxy.
Yes, all the stars that make up the constellation Sagittarius are part of our galaxy, the Milky Way.
All the planets we know of... even those orbiting other stars... are in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Castor, like all visible stars are within the Milky Way Galaxy - Our galaxy.
Since we have not charted all the stars in the Milky Way Galaxy that is currently unknown.
Hi! The milky way is "our" galaxy. The sun is inside it. All the stars you see are in our galaxy. The nearest stars are at a distance that takes light about 4 years to reach us from them.