No, the farthest galaxies from the Milky way are nearly 100000000000000 light years away.
Andromeda and the Milky Way are approximately 2.5 million lightyears apart, and are constantly nearing each other. The Milky Way measures about 100,000 lightyears across, and Andromeda is roughly 220,000 lightyears.
lightyears
100,000 lightyears.
about 26000 lightyears
The Milky Way is our galaxy, the are no other galaxies within it though we are part of a local group of galaxies.
Milky Way.
no we couldn't because galaxies mean the milky way and if the milky way wasn't here we wouldn't
Spiral galaxies
The Milky Way is a Galaxy.
Yes - the Milky Way is just one example of the billions of galaxies in the Universe.
The local group of galaxies that include our Milky Way is called the "Local Group".The local group of galaxies that include our Milky Way is called the "Local Group".The local group of galaxies that include our Milky Way is called the "Local Group".The local group of galaxies that include our Milky Way is called the "Local Group".
There are billions of galaxies in the Universe.