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born within the clouds of dust and scattered throughout most galaxies.
All galaxies are massive clusters of stars scattered across the universe. Many galaxies take the same form, for instance, spiral and elliptical galaxies. Some galaxies also have a black hole in their center.
All galaxies are massive clusters of stars scattered across the universe. Many galaxies take the same form, for instance, spiral and elliptical galaxies. Some galaxies also have a black hole in their center.
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.
All stars and galaxies are in the universe.
A cluster is a collection of galaxies, normally less than about 50 galaxies. All clusters are different and all galaxies are different. A ball point figure would put the maximum number of stars at around 10,000,000,000,000 stars or 10 trillion.
Yes, there are stars between galaxies. When there are collisions or interactions between galaxies, stars can be ripped out of the galaxies. These stars will then wander into space between galaxies. Such stars have been observed with the Hubble Space Telescope. Taken from http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/question.php?number=384
Smaller galaxies do. Larger galaxies contain billions or even trillions of stars.
Galaxies are the massive collection of stars. Therefore galaxies could not have formed without stars.
Stars and Galaxies are related because a galaxy is a system of billions of stars, gases, and dust.
Stars
Bigger galaxies. And stars.