You wouldn't find any galaxies but end up in the middle of our own or you'll end up in dark space (the phrase defines itself). Since nothing travels faster than the speed of light it would take so long that noone would even be motivated to do it. You can measure light speed's distance to time by 1 lightyear would equal 1 year. So it would end up being a 32 million year long trip. But anyways what you WOULD find would more than likely be several other anomolous celestial objects to constellations much like our own.
Nearly all galaxies are moving away from our galaxie and planet.
they are moving in all directions away, toward, sideways relative to EarthNearly all galaxies are moving away from the Earth. This is because the universe is expanding.
It doesn't ! The moon travels around the earth !
Bode's Galaxy (M81 galaxy) and the Cigar Galaxy (M82 galaxy).
The North Pole is located at the northern most tip of the Earth. The only direction in which you can travel from the North Pole is south.
The appearance of things "rising" and "setting" in the sky is caused by the Earth's 24-hour rotation. Everything "rises" in the East.
From anywhere on earth, you would travel south. Depending on where you begin your journey, you may also be required to travel in a south-westerly, or in a south-easterly direction.
by their boundaries
travel exactly east or west
1.6 million miles
~93 million miles.
The Earth orbits the Sun. The Sun orbits the common center of mass of the Milky Way galaxy as a whole, and it carries the Earth along with it. The Milky Way is moving in the general direction of the Andromeda galaxy, and both of them, and the other galaxies in the Local Group (and beyond, to a distance of about 60 million parsecs) are moving towards the Great At tractor.