No stars are actually a galaxy. All stars are stars and all galaxies are galaxies. Stars are found in galaxies. Some galaxies look like tiny dots in our night sky, so might look like a star, but they are not stars; they are galaxies.
Our Galaxy, the Milky Way Galaxy. you may see others that look like stars but are actually galaxy's (M52).
No, most stars you see are stars within our own galaxy, the Milky Way
A galaxy is by a definition a group of stars. If there were no stars it could not be a galaxy.
Every galaxy contains stars, if that's what you mean. "Galaxy" means "big bunch of stars". No stars ===> no galaxy.
Elliptical Galaxy The Elliptical Galaxy has mostly old stars and blue stars are new stars.
"Orion's belt" just refers to the three stars which are more or less in a row. Those are real stars, not galaxies.In the movie "Men In Black", there was a statement that "the galaxy is on Orion's belt", which didn't seem to make sense at first (as was pointed out to the main character); but the "galaxy" turned out to be a miniature galaxy (the size of a pebble), the "belt" was actually a collar, not a belt, and "Orion" was the name of a cat.
If it didn't have stars it wouldn't be a galaxy
No, the vast majority of stars are outside the Milky Way galaxy. However, most of the stars we can actually see as individual stars are in the Milky Way. About the only exception is supernovae ... those are so bright that we can distinguish them even in other galaxies.
The answer is Galaxy. a circular collection of stars is a galaxy
There are about 200 -> 400 billion stars in our Galaxy
Yes, actually there are trillions of other galaxies with stars, and planets in the universe.
the milky way is everybodys galaxy and yes the stars you see are in your galaxy