We've never had any kind of report from any person or thing telling us that
they were outside the galaxy and couldn't see it, and there's not the slightest
shred of any scientific reason to suspect that you can't. Someone has pulled
your chain.
Yes, unless it's a galaxy or nebula outside of the Milky Way... all the singular stars you can see are within our galaxy.
Go outside on any clear night and look in the sky. Every star you can see is in the Milky Way Galaxy.
All stars and constellations that we can see are in the Milky Way galaxy.
Yes it is, as all stars that you can see with the naked eye are in the Milky Way 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.
All stars you can see are in the Milky Way Galaxy.
the milky way is everybodys galaxy and yes the stars you see are in your galaxy
the other parts are only seen because there are clouds in the milky way galaxy that prevents scientists to see all inside the milky way galaxy
The Milky Way has never been photographed from the outside. There is no satellite that can get to the outer limits of our galaxy, therefore nothing can take an actual photograph of it. Every one that you see is what is believed that our galaxy looksl ike.
Bellatrix is in the same galaxy that we are in: the Milky Way. All the stars you see at night are in the Milky Way.
Yes. All the stars you see at night are in the Milky Way galaxy.
My galaxy, and hopefully yours, IS the Milky Way. For information concerning where Earth is in the Milky Way, see related question. See related link for more information