Yes, unless it's a galaxy or nebula outside of the Milky Way... all the singular stars you can see are within our galaxy.
The person who discovered the existence of galaxies outside of the milky way was Edwin Hubble. He also discovered that galaxies move away from each other with a constant acceleration, leading to the big bang theory.
the milky way is a galaxy, there are billions of stars in the milky way galaxy
The Milky way.
NO!!! The Sun and its Solar Sytam are located in one of the 'tails' of the Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way Galaxy it like a giant Catherine Wheel, with a bright core and two curved tails. The whole of which is rotating. We are in one of those curved tails.
Nobody has been outside the Milky Way.
Our galaxy and the Milky Way are the same galaxy.
Yes, scientists know what is outside the Milky Way Galaxy. We know that the Andromeda galaxy is outside the Milky Way. The Andromeda is 300 million light years away from earth, and we have also mapped several stars, too.
All of our Solar System is inside the Milky Way. To get outside the Milky Way, you would have to travel several tens of thousands of light-years.
Yes, a spiral nebula is type of galaxy much like the Milky Way.
Outside our (Milky Way) galaxy.
Not in reality. But may someone went out of milky way through dreams
There is no atmosphere in interstellar space.
Our only view of the Milky Way is from the inside, but the only way to get a good view of its shape would be to view it from the outside.
supernoave that occured outside our own Milky Way galaxy
1924
It really doesn't make sense to talk about a constellation being inside or outside the Milky Way. A constellation is, roughly speaking, a general direction in space. This general direction goes all the way to infinity... or however far our Universe goes. There are objects in this general direction both within and outside our Milky Way.