Clockwise.
The galactic center is somewhere in the neighbourhood of 24 - 26000 light years (around 7600 parsecs)
it revolves around the galactic center
No, stars revolve around the galactic center.
The galactic center is somewhere in the neighbourhood of 24 - 26,000 light years (around 7,600 parsecs) from Earth.
The galactic core is the center (not the very center) of the Milky Way Galaxy.
The galactic center is somewhere in the neighbourhood of 24 - 26,000 light years (around 7,600 parsecs) from Earth.
One galactic rotation at our distance from the galactic center takes about 220 million years.
A galactic centre.A galactic centre.A galactic centre.A galactic centre.
The galactic center.
Yes, there's a galactic alignment every year. As the earth goes around the sun, at one point the earth, sun, and the center of the galaxy line up.
No!The Sun orbits around the galactic center, one revolution in about 220 000 000 years.
The solar system orbits around the center of our galaxy, the Milky Way. The Milky Way orbits with a number of other galaxies around the center of our galactic cluster, called the Local Group. The Local Group rotates in the Virgo Supercluster (a cluster of galactic clusters). It is unclear if superclusters rotate around anything.