No. The sun is just one of hundreds of billions of stars in the Milk Way galaxy.
no only our solar system does
To be honest, if the sun was bigger than a galaxy, then it wouldn't fit in the galaxy and we wouldn't be here because the sun would burn us b=from being so large. But to answer your question, all galaxies are bigger than the sun.
No, galaxies do not change with the seasons because of Earth's movement around the Sun. The change in seasons on Earth is due to the tilt of its axis relative to its orbit around the Sun. Galaxies are vast collections of stars, gas, and dust that remain relatively unchanged on large timescales.
Galaxies that are moving away from the sun are red shifted, that is the light from them looks more red to us that it is when it is emitted. This is due to the speed of the galaxy moving away from which in effect stretches out the wavelengths of the light. Red shift is not the method by which galaxies move away from the sun, rather, it is a consequence of it.
Big Bang, formation of galaxies, formation of sun, formation of earth.
Yes! Their billions of suns in different galaxies
Yes. The Earth, our Sun and indeed all planets, stars and galaxies are in constant motion.
Our sun is a rather ordinary star; there are countless stars in the Milky Way and other galaxies that are much larger. If you consider galaxies as 'objects', and it is not uncommon to do so, then any galaxy or star cluster would dwarf the sun.
Stars The Moon The sun Galaxies Nebulae Satellites
See Star wars. :)
other stars , nebulous , and galaxies
The closest star is the Sun - about 8 light-minutes away. The closest star after that is at a distance of 4.3 light-years; the farthest observable galaxies (galaxies are made up of stars) are at a distance of over 40 billion light-years.The closest star is the Sun - about 8 light-minutes away. The closest star after that is at a distance of 4.3 light-years; the farthest observable galaxies (galaxies are made up of stars) are at a distance of over 40 billion light-years.The closest star is the Sun - about 8 light-minutes away. The closest star after that is at a distance of 4.3 light-years; the farthest observable galaxies (galaxies are made up of stars) are at a distance of over 40 billion light-years.The closest star is the Sun - about 8 light-minutes away. The closest star after that is at a distance of 4.3 light-years; the farthest observable galaxies (galaxies are made up of stars) are at a distance of over 40 billion light-years.