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more than a lifetime
they would not be able to sustain human life.
No scale was specified. However, if the Earth was one inch, the Andromeda Galaxy would be 29,300,000,000 miles away.
Once we exhaust Earth's resources, there is going to be a war over materials. Recycling will be drastically more enforced, and we will most likely use the recycled materials to leave Earth and find a new home. We would completely destroy Earth, therefore it's unhabitable.
If the sun were the size of a human eyeball then Earth would be the size of a grain of fine sand.
IF the earth was not in the milky way then it would have had to develop in a different galaxy, this would potentially mean that the earths sphere would have a dent half its size (half life radioisotopes) and people could not live on it as there would not be enough of an ozone layer to produce enough oxygen for human beings or other living species
Sure. Several of the space probes launched by the USA are not boundto the Earth or the Sun, and are going through the Milky Way. They'llcross the Milky Way and leave it completely in a few hundred thousandyears, if they don't bump into something first.
We would be a little spec on earth is your answer! -------------------------- We are in an outer arm (spiral) of the milky way galaxy.
you could, but the human race does not have the technology to get that far without the crew dying first. It would take too many light years, with we could warp space then yes it can be possible.
Once around the Milky Way would take about 225 -> 250 million years.
its a spiral galaxy and the earth is so far the only planet in the milky way where we know we can live
Simple answer no if the Milky Way did not exist there would be no human race. We are part of the Milky Way galaxy in the most fundamental ways. We live here. We evolved here. Every element that goes up to make the Earth and you except hydrogen and most of the helium comes from stars that lived and died billions of years ago within the Milky Way. We owe our entire existence to the Milky Way. It is absolutely probable that life has arisen in far off galaxies. They might even look remarkably like humans although that is very doubtful but still they will not be humans.
No. Cause the sun is any star
more than a lifetime
It takes 225 MILLION Earth years for the sun to orbit the center of the Milky Way once.
The Milky Way and the Sun aren't "planets", so I suppose it would be Earth by default.
No, thank goodness; otherwise life here on Earth would be impossible.