Our galaxy, the milky way, has stars much bigger than our sun. Our sun is considered one solar mass in it's size. The Milky Way has star that range from 1/2 a solar mass to 50 or 100 solar masses.
Every galaxy contains stars, if that's what you mean. "Galaxy" means "big bunch of stars". No stars ===> no galaxy.
No. The big dipper is just a small collection of a handful of stars. All stars that you see in the sky are part of the Milky Way Galaxy, which is composed of hudreds of billions of stars.
A galaxy is by a definition a group of stars. If there were no stars it could not be a galaxy.
The Big Dipper is part of the Milky Way galaxy. Specifically, it is an asterism composed of seven bright stars from the Ursa Major constellation, which is located within our galaxy. The stars in the Big Dipper are relatively close to Earth, and their positions and brightness make them easily identifiable in the night sky.
no the no. of stars in the milky way is not the evidence in support of the big bang cosmology.
Elliptical Galaxy The Elliptical Galaxy has mostly old stars and blue stars are new stars.
its stars coming together really closly
The revolution of stars about the center of the galaxy is like that of planets around the sun, only in a larger scale. The motion is caused by angular momentum (which derives ultimately from the Big Bang) and the stars are prevented from flying off in all directions by the gravitational field of the galaxy.
If it didn't have stars it wouldn't be a galaxy
The answer is Galaxy. a circular collection of stars is a galaxy
There are about 200 -> 400 billion stars in our Galaxy
the milky way is everybodys galaxy and yes the stars you see are in your galaxy