constellations are actually pictures that the stars seem to be arranged in from particular point of view, while nebulae are places where stars form. Both the Orion Nebula and the stars in the constellation Orion are visible from Earth, and both are in the Milky Way Galaxy, of which we are also a member. In fact, most things that you see in the night sky are part of our galaxy.
Nebulae are found in most galaxies
There are galaxies and nebula in every direction, including Aquarius.
Stars, galaxies, nebulae ... a constellation is just a defined patch of sky, so anything you'd normally find in the sky might be found in a constellation.
Presumably all of them. However, we're too far away from any galaxy except our own to actually see the nebulae inside them.
In 1923, Edwin Hubble showed that the "spiral nebulae" that were presumed to be within our galaxy, the Milky Way, were actually other galaxies that lay far beyond our. The following year, he showed that the Milky Way was just one of many galaxies in the universe. Hubble's discovery, announced on January 1, 1925, fundamentally changed the view of the universe.
zodiac
who discovered the galaxies who discovered the galaxies
The universe is expanding.
Sorry, no galaxies can be found within the solar system.
The types of nebulae that exist in the universe include bright, dark and emission nebulae. Different nebulae are often named for their shape. More information can be found on "Sea and Sky".
Yes. In astronomy a constellation is an area of the sky, and contains all the stars and other celestial objects, including galaxies within the area of the constellation. However, most, if not all of the original constellations are made up of stars and do not contain galaxies. A great example of this is the Andromeda Galaxy. It's called that because the galaxy (which is 2.2 million light years away) is found by looking through the constellation of Andromeda.
Nebulae are found in various places throughout every galaxy.