Yes. Consider two circles, one inside the other with the same center point. Both circles change in elevation equally, however, the inner circle has a smaller circumference than the outer circle. Thus the inner circle has a shorter distance to travel the same amount of rise as the outer circle, resulting in a steeper slope.
It does not look like a spiral because we are inside the disk that forms the spiral arms. To see the spiral, you have to be outside the galaxy, viewing the disk from above or below.
The threading (spiral screwy part), is on the outside of the barbell, instead of actually inside the barbell (internally threaded).
A galaxy orbiting outside spiral galaxy
usually a very fine spiral (usually a spiral inside a spiral) of tungsten wire.
My spiral notebook went inside the ocean's Deep current.
It would appear as a cloud of stars, just like the Milky Way.
Our only view of the Milky Way is from the inside, but the only way to get a good view of its shape would be to view it from the outside.
Yes, a spiral nebula is type of galaxy much like the Milky Way.
There is only one spiral staircase. But it contains about 354 steps.
because nobody has ever been outside our galaxy so we can't tell if it is a spiral galaxy or not.
Inside of the valvular intestine of a shark.
out side technically it is not inside