Not at the moment but in about 5 billion years it will merge with the Andromeda galaxy.
No, they just named the galaxy the milky way because it's like....... well, a milky way.
The Milky Way is a huge group of stars, somewhere between 200 and 400 billion stars. The stars themselves, or the Milky Way in its entirety, is not in line with anything.
We are IN the Milky Way Galaxy, and therefore not able to line up with anything!!
Lots of people own little bits of the Milky Way galaxy. The Earth and everything on it is part of the Milky Way so if you own anything at all you too own a bit of the Milky Way. People themselves are also part of the Milky Way so in a way bits of the Milky Way own parts of the Milky Way.
The Milky Way doesn't really rotate around anything. Our home galaxy and nearby Andromeda are pretty much at the center of what is called a local group of gravitationally bound galaxies. As such, it is unsupportable to say that the Milky Way rotates around anything else.
The Andromeda Galaxy is moving towards our Milky Way galaxy at a speed of about 110 km/s. This movement is called the "Andromeda-Milky Way collision." Scientists predict that the two galaxies will collide in about 4 billion years, merging into a single galaxy.
The Andromeda Galaxy, also known as M31, is the nearest spiral galaxy to the Milky Way and is roughly 2.537 million light-years away. It is larger than the Milky Way, containing about one trillion stars compared to the Milky Way's estimated 100 to 400 billion stars. Both galaxies are expected to collide in about 4.5 billion years, ultimately merging to form a new galaxy. Additionally, Andromeda has a more prominent central bulge and a higher rate of star formation compared to the Milky Way.
The closest other galaxy to us would be the Canis Major Dwarf galaxy. It is only about 25,000 light years away (it is currently merging with the Milky Way).
The Milky Way doesn't really rotate around anything. Our home galaxy and nearby Andromeda are pretty much at the center of what is called a local group of gravitationally bound galaxies. As such, it is unsupportable to say that the Milky Way rotates around anything else.
There no milky way in sky there is only milky way galaxy
Yes it really does! It rotates around the Milky Way Galaxy.
The Milky Way galaxy is.... called the Milky Way Galaxy