You can see the faint edge of the Milky Way, our galaxy. It is not a sharp edge, but appears as an indistinct band across the night sky. That is how it got its name. The cloudy appearance of the Milky Way is actually the effect of the billions of stars that are gathered near each other in our disc-like galaxy.
"On a clear day, you can see forever!"
But on a clear night, this is LITERALLY true. You can see stars, planets, moons, nebulae, other galaxies, and with a big enough telescope, you can see things so far away and so old as to go back almost to the beginning of the universe.
Neptune is inside our solar system.
They are both visible and inside the solar system.
Our solar system is located near the outer edge of the Milky Way.
Yes. You want clear plastic for a solar still, because you want the sunlight to heat the wet material inside, not the black plastic cover.
The most common star in our solar system is the Sun, with a total count of one (1). There are no other stars inside the solar system.
No. All the stars you see at night are in our galaxy, but outside of the solar system. The only star in our solar system is the one at its center: the sun.
Neptune is inside our solar system.
They are both visible and inside the solar system.
Assuming you have functioning sight, you look up on a dark clear night.
The solar system definitely is, and most of the stars you see are as well. If you can see the Andromeda Nebula on a very dark clear night, that is a system of stars outside our galaxy.
The Solar System is inside the Galaxy the Milky Way
A galaxy CONTAINS a solar system, meaning, a solar system is inside a galaxy
there is only 1 star in our solar system, which is our sun. the stars that we can see at night are outside of our solar system
Yes, I have some my kitchen drawer, which is inside the solar system.
No. Our solar system includes the sun and the planets that orbit it.
The most recognizable cloud formation in our solar system is the Milky Way, which is the name of our galaxy as well. On a clear night in rural areas, the sky is covered almost completely with tiny stars.
NO! galaxys are many thousand times bigger than our solar system