Pluto may be found about 40 astronomical units away from the star Sol. You could also say it is about 328 light minutes from Sol. Sol itself is in one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way galaxy, about 2/3rds from the center.
No, it is the other way round. The Milky Way is the name of our Galaxy, which consists of billions of stars, many of which have a planetary system. Sun, our star, also known as Sol, is the center of our planetary system called the Solar System.
Yes, astronomy considers all solar objects directly bound to the gravity of the sun to be a part of the solar system, the Oort Belt (around 50,000 AU); some argue that this extends to around 2 light years (125,000 AU) from the center point of the sun. Pluto is about 39 AU from the sun.
Yes, Pluto is a part of the Milky Galaxy. Pluto is a part of our local solar system, and our solar system is in the Milky Way Galaxy.
No, it is towards the edge of the solar system.
yes all of our planets and there moons are in the milky way galaxy
Yes. The Earth is part of the Solar System which in turn is part of the Milky Way Galaxy.
A spiral galaxy is one of the three basic types of galaxies. There are also elliptical and irregular galaxies. The Milky Way, our galaxy, is a spiral galaxy.
Yes Pluto does still exist. It has been downgraded to a dwarf planet but it is still in our solar system, and so it is still in our galaxy.
Yes, it is estimated that every galaxy contains billions of planets.
As a matter of fact, yes. It has planets just like the Milky way galaxy.
The closest galaxy that has planets is the Andromeda galaxy. It is the nearest galactic neighbor to the earth. The Milky Way has other planets too.
Planets orbit stars, stars orbit a galaxy. Planets are not "on" anything. A lot of stars out there have planets - we are just finding out how many now that we have better techniques to find them. So probably all galaxies have at least some stars with planets.
No
Uranus is in our galaxy, the Milky Way. Everything you can see in the sky at night without a telescope, all the planets and stars are all in our galaxy.
The planets are part of the galaxy.
It is possible that every galaxy has some planets. We just are starting to detect some planets in other galaxies.
The planets we know of, some 300 now, are all in the Milky Way galaxy.
Planets are not necessarily in a galaxy but chances are very slim that in a galaxy that is not just newly forming there would not be any exoplanets.
We expect the Andromeda galaxy to be just like our own Milky Way galaxy. We can see stars (suns) in the Andromeda Galaxy and just as stars have planets orbiting them in our galaxy, we believe that there must be planets also orbiting stars in the Andromeda galaxy.
No. I don't believe any planets have been detected outside of our Galaxy. Within our Galaxy, planets are detected by inference not visual techniques. See link for lists of known extrasolar planets
As a matter of fact, yes. It has planets just like the Milky way galaxy.
There are billions of planets and moons in the Star Wars galaxy.
The galaxy is not a planet. The galaxy is MADE of millions and millions of stars and planets.
It is extremely likely, but we cannot yet find planets from that far away. All the planets we have found to date are in our own galaxy. The Andromeda galaxy is 2.5 million light years away whereas our galaxy is about 100,000 light years across.
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There are no known planets in any galaxy other than our own. While it is doubtless that other galaxies, including the cigar galaxy, contain planets they are much too far away fur us to detect them.