Yes. In the second pilot, the first one with Kirk as the Captain, they left the galaxy. In the one with the Medusan Ambassador, they left it again. I am not sure if the Kelvans took he Enterprise outside the galaxy or not (the episode in which the crew was mostly turned into small paperweight-sized objects). And in one episode of TNG the Enterprise D wound up so far from this galaxy, I don't know if they could even tell where it was. I think this was a Q episode but am not sure.
I can't determine what you're asking about. Stars do travel; they orbit around the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.
I said WHERE?!
a spiral galaxy
Our solar system is not far from the end of one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way. Our sun is about 26 or 27 thousand light years from the galactic center, and the galaxy is about 70 to 100 thousand light years across. See link for more information.See link for pictorial representation.
Those stars except Polaris or the North Pole stars really orbit the Milky Way Galaxy but not Outside
Go outside on any clear night and look in the sky. Every star you can see is in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Yes, unless it's a galaxy or nebula outside of the Milky Way... all the singular stars you can see are within our galaxy.
No, the Milky Way is a galaxy and it is the galaxy that we live in.
Our Galaxy, the Milky Way Galaxy
The Milky Way Galaxy
In our galaxy - the Milky Way.
the milky way is a galaxy, in fact, it is our galaxy. Our galaxy is in a spiral and the Sun ( which is a star)is in the spiral.yo peeps
The Sun. Seriously, the Sun is a star and we are in the Milky Way.
I can't determine what you're asking about. Stars do travel; they orbit around the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.
No - there are about 200 - 400 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy
The "Milky Way" is the name of the galaxy in which we live.
If you can see the star, it's part of the Milky Way. You need one of the biggest telescopes to see any star outside our galaxy.