Yes, actually there are trillions of other galaxies with stars, and planets in the universe.
All the planets we know of... even those orbiting other stars... are in the Milky Way Galaxy.
We expect the Andromeda galaxy to be just like our own Milky Way galaxy. We can see stars (suns) in the Andromeda Galaxy and just as stars have planets orbiting them in our galaxy, we believe that there must be planets also orbiting stars in the Andromeda galaxy.
nothing important
stars, nebulas, and planets.
pluto,asteroids,stars,comets and dwarf planets Stars, gas, black holes.
The Milky Way galaxy is made of stars, dust clouds, planets, comets, and other astronomical objects, probably including a black hole at the center, but mostly stars.
Yes.The Milky Way is the edge of the galaxy in which we all live. Hence, this solar system resides in the Milky Way galaxy. Additionally, other stars in this galaxy have planets, and thus are their own solar systems.
No. The sun and the planets form the Solar System, which is just one infinitesimally small part of the Milky Way.
Our galaxy is called milky-way. It had different kinds of stars, planets and super no a. It had hundreds to billions of stars in here Andromeda is more bigger than our galaxy, milky-way. Scientist says that milky-way and Andromeda will collide and will formed milkdromeda.
No one knows. Astronomers are scanning the visible stars of our own Milky Way galaxy for planets orbiting faraway stars, but such planets would have to be nearly the size of Jupiter to be detected at such distances
No. The Milky Way galaxy is just one of billions of galaxies in the Universe. Just like there are billions of planets in the Milky Way Galaxy, there are also comparable numbers of planets in other galaxies.
Because a galaxy contains not only stars, but planets, asteroids, comets and other stellar material.