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.
A constellation is NOT a galaxy.
galaxy well... the milky way itself is a constellation but we live in what we call the milky way galaxy.,
Because the Andromeda Galaxy or M31 is a major galaxy and is found in the constellation Andromeda.
3C 153 is a Seyfert galaxy located in the constellation Auriga.
Andromeda is a galaxy (spiral) and not a constellation
A galaxy is larger than a supergiant constellation. A galaxy can contain billions to trillions of stars, while a supergiant constellation refers to a group of stars that form a recognizable pattern in the sky, typically within our own galaxy.
The Andromeda galaxy was named after the princess Andromeda from Greek mythology. The constellation Andromeda, in which the galaxy is found, is also named after her. It was named as such because of its proximity to the constellation and its association with the myth.
Orion is a constellation in our galaxy, the Milky Way.
The Milky Way is out nearest Galaxy. It is not a constellation.
he is a constellation. Not a star!!!!
Yes, Andromeda is a constellation. However, there is also a galaxy 2.2 million light years away from our galaxy named the Andromeda Galaxy - it's named that because you have to look through the constellation of Andromeda to see it.
constellation