it would depend on what angle and distance you where observing it from to further confuse the issue itwould depend on what type of galexy it is (one like ours)?
seashells are rocks. this would be because seashells are made out of minerals and formed by some of the same things as rocks. if you looked close enough at certain shells then you would see that seashells are alike with certain kinds and shapes of rocks.
A Galaxy is made of Stars, Star Dust, and Gas.
The correct answer would be rift. If you looked at the crossword puzzle it showed you the answer.
As I looked longingly at the the silt-laden delta, I was stricken by my sentiment for the sediment I saw. The sediment, you see, had been built up over a number of years.
Bugs
no you would break it if you looked in it anyway
I see that you are not from this galaxy. I would like to direct you to the next galaxy. I would like for you to name the galaxy in which our solar system resides.
The galaxy was named after milk because when early astronomers looked at the sky they noticed a band of stars that somewhat looked like milk!
On the other side of the galaxy, you would see empty space, followed by more galaxies.
The Ancient Greeks, who thought it looked like milk in the sky.
If you were located in the Andromeda galaxy, our Milky Way galaxy would appear to you as a large, dim, fuzzy patch of haze in the sky. When you looked at it through binoculars it would look larger and less dim. Through a large telescope, you'd see that it's a far-off collection of hundreds of billions of stars, but you wouldn't be able to pick out any individual stars. The sun would be one of those hundreds of billions of stars. You couldn't see it separately from the others, any you'd have no way at all to detect planets orbiting any of the stars in that far-off galaxy.
No, it's just a pattern of stars that someone once thought looked like a scorpion. If you were to move away from earth, all the constallations would look quite different.
small one would do
The sky.
a micro beam
Somebody looked at the "clouds of stars" and thought it looked like milk spilt out in the sky.
they see the past when they look up and see the galaxies. its looking back in time because light can take years to travel to earth and so its like their looking at the youth of the galaxy.