The Milky Way Galaxy.
The galaxy that contains Earth is called the Milky Way.
No, the galaxy in which Earth is located is not classified as elliptical. The Milky Way galaxy, which contains our solar system, is classified as a spiral galaxy.
The galaxy that contains Earth and the rest of the Solar system is the Milky Way galaxy.
The Milky Way is a galaxy, not a planet like Earth. A galaxy contains hundreds of billions of stars - each is a Sun, and many of those may have their own planets.The Milky Way is a galaxy, not a planet like Earth. A galaxy contains hundreds of billions of stars - each is a Sun, and many of those may have their own planets.The Milky Way is a galaxy, not a planet like Earth. A galaxy contains hundreds of billions of stars - each is a Sun, and many of those may have their own planets.The Milky Way is a galaxy, not a planet like Earth. A galaxy contains hundreds of billions of stars - each is a Sun, and many of those may have their own planets.
The Solar System contains the Earth-Moon system. The Milky Way galaxy contains the Solar System. The Virgo supercluster contains the Milky Way galaxy. The Universe contains the Virgo supercluster.
The moon is a natural satellite of Earth and is not directly related to the Milky Way galaxy. The Milky Way is the galaxy that contains our solar system, including Earth and the moon. The moon orbits Earth, not the Milky Way.
False. The Earth is located in a spiral galaxy called the Milky Way, not the "Mickey Way". The Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy that contains our solar system.
Yes, the Earth is located in the Milky Way galaxy. The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy that contains our solar system and billions of other stars, planets, and celestial objects.
Because a galaxy contains not only stars, but planets, asteroids, comets and other stellar material.
our galaxy contains between 200- to 400-billion stars arranged in a giant disc shape. The diameter is 100,000 light years with an average thickness of 10,000 light years. The Earth is located about 28,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way.
The UDF 7556 galaxy (one of the galaxies in the HUDF field) is a spiral galaxy 6000 million light-years from Earth in the Fornax constellation, and is 100,000 light-years in diameter, and contains about 100 billion stars.
The Milky Way, parts of which we can see from Earth curving around us.