I suppose if we survive long enough it is possible. In fact if we stay where we are for another 4.5 billion years, Andromeda will "merge" with the Milky Way Galaxy (Our Galaxy).
Ah, what a great question! The little galaxy right next door to us is called the Andromeda galaxy. It's like our neighbor in this big galactic community we all live in. Just imagine all the stunning colors our universe shares with Andromeda!
Yes, my galaxy is the Milky Way and it is going to collide with Andromeda. Cannot answer for people living in other galaxies.
With current technology, it would take hundreds of thousands of years to reach Andromeda Galaxy. The distance is about 2.537 million light-years away, making it impossible for humans to travel there in their lifetime using conventional means.
The largest Galaxy ever discovered was IC1101, an Elliptical Galaxy, but the most common large ones are Spirals such as the biggest Galaxies in the Local Group, Andromeda, Milky Way, and Triangulum; all Spirals.
Ah, isn't our universe truly a wonderful place? Andromeda galaxy is our closest neighbor in the vast cosmic expanse, just gracefully floating nearby like a delicate whisper in the night sky. The beauty of these galaxies dancing together harmoniously is a true gift for our eyes to behold.
Not with earth specifically, but it will eventually collide with the Milky Way Galaxy. Galaxies are mostly empty space, so when this collision occurs the chances of earth suffering a collision as a result are negligible.
It's to hot for humans to live on
no the sun is to hot
Speeches were made ever since humans were able to communicate
a telescopeIn 1925, Edwin Hubble discover cepheid variable(s) in what we now call the Andromeda Galaxy. From those he could tell that the group of stars was too far away to be part of the Milky Way. It was the first proof that other galaxies exist.
Everyone who has ever lived has spent their entire life in a galaxy. The planet we live in is part of the Milky Way Galaxy.
All of the constellations that people have ever invented, and all the stars you can see with your eyes, are in the Milky Way Galaxy. The nearest other galaxy ... the so-called "Andromeda Galaxy" ... is technically visible to the naked eye. But it's not easy to see, and it's not bright enough to have been included in any constellation that people invented and made up stories about. And there's definitely no way you can possibly see individual stars in it.