Andromeda is not a stellar system, but rather a galaxy. It's incredibly far from Earth: we could technically send something there, but at speeds currently available to us, no person could live long enough to reach it.
You don't need anything to travel to the Solar System. You are already there, on the third planet called Earth.
They could, but as of now, no astronauts have travelled to any other planets in the solar system.
The nearest galaxy to us is the Andromeda Galaxy, about 2.5 Million light years from us. It can be just about seen with the naked eye, as a small cloudy looking object in the Andromeda constellation.
The black hole at the centre of the Andromeda galaxy is estimated to be 140 million Solar-masses.
It has been suggested that comets originate in the Oort cloud and then travel in long elliptical orbits around the Sun.
No, it is in the Milky Way Galaxy.
We are located in a galaxy known as the Milky Way. It doesn't seem likely that our Solar System originated in a far-away galaxy like the Andromeda Galaxy.
No. We live in the Milky Way Galaxy. The Andromeda Galaxy is 2.5 million light years away.
That depends a lot on where you want to travel. Here are some samples:To the Sun: 8 minutes.To Toliman (the nearest star system outside our Solar System): 4.3 years.To the Andromeda Galaxy (a "near-by" galaxy, part of our Local Group): the current estimate is 2.5 million years.That depends a lot on where you want to travel. Here are some samples:To the Sun: 8 minutes.To Toliman (the nearest star system outside our Solar System): 4.3 years.To the Andromeda Galaxy (a "near-by" galaxy, part of our Local Group): the current estimate is 2.5 million years.That depends a lot on where you want to travel. Here are some samples:To the Sun: 8 minutes.To Toliman (the nearest star system outside our Solar System): 4.3 years.To the Andromeda Galaxy (a "near-by" galaxy, part of our Local Group): the current estimate is 2.5 million years.That depends a lot on where you want to travel. Here are some samples:To the Sun: 8 minutes.To Toliman (the nearest star system outside our Solar System): 4.3 years.To the Andromeda Galaxy (a "near-by" galaxy, part of our Local Group): the current estimate is 2.5 million years.
We don't know for sure - Andromeda is just too far to see that small detail. However, from current understanding of solar system formation, there will be billions of solar systems, planets and probably life .
Andromeda is a fairly large galaxy around 2 million light years away, it's not in our solar system or even in our galaxy. It's a huge separate group of billions of stars, each of which may have solar systems and planets of their own.
Andromeda is younger than the solar system, which has beat it by about 1.5bln
The Andromeda Galaxy is a separate galaxy, about 120,000 light years across, containing trillions of stars - possibly many with planets. Our Solar System is a single star with 8 planets and at best measures 2 light years.
You don't need anything to travel to the Solar System. You are already there, on the third planet called Earth.
The same way all other objects in the solar system travel, it will be back in 2061.
In any solar system; that's what planets do.
The solar system definitely is, and most of the stars you see are as well. If you can see the Andromeda Nebula on a very dark clear night, that is a system of stars outside our galaxy.