There are all kinds of stars in our Milky Way galaxy. Our sun is a G2V type star. There are red giants, blue giants, white dwarfs, red dwarfs, brown dwarfs, and probably even black dwarfs (burned out suns), neutron stars, and pulsars. There are also herbig-haro objects, a peculiar type of star that emits collimated bipolar jets of radiation.
Most commonly, in the spiral arms. This is where the most stars die and therefore where the most material is for star formation. There is evidence of young stars in the galactic center but no one's quite sure why just yet.
giant molecular clouds
No. The stars we see in the night sky are INthe Milky Way Galaxy, they form part of it.Galaxies are made of billions of stars.
The milky way was formed by stars gases and dust . The milky way also started as a black hole and stars dust and gases gathered around the black hole.
Yes, there are young stars in the Milky Way Galaxy.
The Milky Way Galaxy contains interstellar matter that may form new stars.
The Milky Way is a huge group of stars, somewhere between 200 and 400 billion stars. The stars themselves, or the Milky Way in its entirety, is not in line with anything.
The Milky Way is a galaxy made up of billions of stars of which our solar system is a part. A constellation is a grouping of stars in apparent proximity that form identifiable patterns. Both are made up of stars.
There are about 33% F type stars in our Milky Way.
the milky way is a galaxy, there are billions of stars in the milky way galaxy
The Earth is in the Milky Way Galaxy. We can see stars at night, so yes.
The milky way is not a constellation
The Milky Way is our galaxy.
No, the Milky Way is a galaxy. It's the one we live in.