Any such speed must be specified with relation to something: for example, with relation to the Andromeda Galaxy, the average of the Local Group, of the Local Supergroup, etc. There is no such thing as an "absolute speed".
yes through wormholes
the universe is bigger than the galaxy because our galaxy (the milky way) is in the universe.
the milky way is a galaxy. the universe is all of space.
Universe >> Milky Way galaxy >> Solar System > Sun >> Earth
Nope, other way around: The Milky Way - our home galaxy - is part of the universe.
The full question is:What lists the relative sizes from smallest to largest(1) our solar system, universe, Milky Way Galaxy(2) our solar system, Milky Way Galaxy, universe(3) Milky Way Galaxy, our solar system, universe(4) Milky Way Galaxy, universe, our solar system(2) our solar system, Milky Way Galaxy, universe
There's only 1 universe the milky way is a galaxy
..What..? The univere is EVERYTHING, including the milky way galaxy.
in the milky way galaxy.
No. The Milky Way is estimated to be nearly as old as the Universe itself.
That will depend on the speed of our spacecraft. At its current speed, the Voyager spacecraft will not make it out of the Milky Way galaxy within the expected lifetime of the universe, and certainly not before the Andromeda galaxy collides with the Milky Way galaxy about 3 billion years from now. In another thousand years, after we've had some time to study this, ask me again.
The Milky Way Galaxy is not at the center of the universe