As the universe expands these galaxies are moving away from us. The light waves they give off appear stretched out which means they have a longer wavelength. Wavelength relates to the colour of light and the longer the wavelength the closer to red it looks.
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.
uh no.. hence 'blach'heads..so they should look black. white heads are white and full of puss.
Yes. Some examples of galaxies (which you can look up) are the: Andromeda Galaxy, the Large Magellanic cloud and the Small Magellanic Cloud.
Look up in the sky with a good telescope, and find things that are too fuzzy-looking to be stars. Some of them are nebulas, and a few may be comets - but a lot of them are other galaxies.
It could be a lot of things, some harmless and some not. You should let a doctor look at it.
The three main types of galaxies are spiral galaxies (disk-shaped with a central bulge and spiral arms), elliptical galaxies (smooth and oval-shaped without spiral arms), and irregular galaxies (lack a distinct shape).
Some can be, not all. Galaxies with a lot red giant stars will look red. Red giant:A huge red aging bloated star about 100 times the size of the sun.
some can be pills they are yellow and white some can be pills they are yellow and white
You could get a light grey carpet and go for a period styled/French look, it might look odd at first but you should get some white chandeliers and white furniture to make it all match and it'll look great!
Different galaxies have different shapes and sizes according to how many stars are in each. The best way to actually see them "up close" is by looking at images (some amazing ones are taken by the Hubble telescope).
you get the magnifying glass and you look and there should be a white diamond with some words on it and that one would be the one that you click on
There are an estimated 130 billion galaxies, and most all of them are undiscovered since we have only mapped a very tiny fraction of the whole universe. As we look further in space, we see back in time. On the outskirts of the universe, we can see galaxies with quasars, some of the first galaxies, their quasars in their centers have probably burned out by now and they are just regular galaxies, but we see them as they were billions of years ago with their quasars burning, their light is just now getting to us.