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It depends on how much gravity that causes stars to form. It depends on how big the star in the galaxies is.
Everything. Without it there wouldn't be any galaxies. And no other force seems to have much effect, although electromagnetism may have early effects in shaping the "arms".
Our local group of galaxies is bound by gravity, although the large and small magellanic clouds nearby are moving fast enough they are probably just passing through. Our entire local group is also moving towards another big group of galaxies known as "the Great Attractor," which itself is bound by gravity. There are numerous clusters of galaxies bound by gravity throughout the hundred billion galaxies in our universe.
In other you mean, and yes. There is gravity every nano meter of the whole universe, nothing is away from gravity, gravity is everywhere.
Yes, gravity exists in outer space. Gravity holds the moon in its orbit around the earth. It holds the earth in orbit around the sun. It holds the milky way galaxy together. It holds the local group of galaxies together. And the local group of galaxies might be a group of a string of galaxies held together by the great attractor.
No - without gravity, galaxies would not have formed, planets would not have formed, stars would not have formed.
Planet Earth, the Sun and stars, galaxies, ...
A crucial role. Without gravity, matter would never have gathered together, to form galaxies and stars.
one kind is lenticular galaxies
All of them
It depends on how much gravity that causes stars to form. It depends on how big the star in the galaxies is.
Everything. Without it there wouldn't be any galaxies. And no other force seems to have much effect, although electromagnetism may have early effects in shaping the "arms".
Gradius Galaxies happened in 2001.
For starters, if there were no separation between two (or more) galaxies, it would be considered a single galaxies, not two or more. The reason matter is clumped together into galaxies at all (with separations in between) is because of gravity - gravity tends to do that, i.e., to clump things together.
Gravity is the force that keeps galaxies and solar systems together.
according to scientist barey there is gravity everywhere even in other galaxies
GRAVITY!