Of course - most mass is not visible.
It is a 'sister' galaxy, visible with the naked eye. Very similar to our own and part of the local group.
Because that is where most of the visible objects are.
All named stars are within the Milky Way galaxy. In fact all individual stars are within the Milky Way galaxy.
Yes, we can see stars outside of our galaxy in the night sky. These stars are part of other galaxies that are visible to us from Earth.
A galaxy is an enormous group of hundreds of millions or billions of star systems that orbit around a common center and gravitationally interact with each other. We live in the Milky Way galaxy, and all of the stars visible to our unaided eyes are part of our galaxy.
No, not at all. Jupiter is part of the Solar System, which is part of the Milky Way galaxy, which is part of the Local Group (of Galaxies), which is part of the Local Superclusters. Jupiter's mass is nothing when compared to the mass of Superclusters.
The visible part of distant galaxies is the collection of stars, gas, and dust within the galaxy. These components emit light that reaches our telescopes, allowing us to observe and study the structure and properties of the galaxies.
0 km. The Earth is part of our galaxy.0 km. The Earth is part of our galaxy.0 km. The Earth is part of our galaxy.0 km. The Earth is part of our galaxy.
the uniforms seemed to blend in with the surroundings.The uniforms seemed to blend in with the surroundings; the individual soldier was visible only as part of a great flowing mass.
Galaxy is a noun.
Galaxy is a noun.
Galaxy is a noun.