the milky way is everybodys galaxy and yes the stars you see are in your galaxy
Yes, we can see stars outside of our galaxy in the night sky. These stars are part of other galaxies that are visible to us from Earth.
All the stars you can see in the night sky are part of our galaxy, the Milky Way.
Yes: Any star you see in the night sky is within our own Galaxy.
The stars we see in the sky are in the Milky Way.
No. The stars we see in the night sky are INthe Milky Way Galaxy, they form part of it.Galaxies are made of billions of stars.
No. The only stars you can see are within our own galaxy, the Milky Way. The Andromeda Galaxy is a faint smudge of light 2.5 million light years away, beneath the constellation Cassiopeia. Most of the stars you can see are within a couple hundred light years. A few, like Deneb, are several thousand light years away--and just extremely bright.
No. The big dipper is just a small collection of a handful of stars. All stars that you see in the sky are part of the Milky Way Galaxy, which is composed of hudreds of billions of stars.
Every star we see in the sky is part of our own Milky Way galaxy. You cannot see any stars in other galaxies with the naked eye.
Yes. Well, parts of it. If you look down, on the floor, you see planet Earth, which is part of our own galaxy; and all the stars and planets you see in the night sky are part of our own galaxy. Moreover, if it's dark enough, you can see a band of light, which is what gave our galaxy the name, "Milky Way".
Go outside on any clear night and look in the sky. Every star you can see is in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Hercules is a constellation pattern of stars in the sky. Certainly not a galaxy.
The sky that we look up to is the universe itself. You see stars, you see the sun, the moon, some near planets. Asking "is the sky bigger than the galaxy?" makes no sense as a question. You can even see the Milky Way galaxy in the sky on a clear night sometimes. I would say the sky is the galaxy, in a way... The sky is space. We see beyond Earth when we look up to it at night. However our field of view is definitely smaller than a galaxy, we can't see all around the outside of Earth from a single position. In this sense, a galaxy is bigger than the sky. But as I said, the question itself doesn't really make much sense.