Battle of the Planets - 1978 Fastest Gun in the Galaxy 1-48 was released on:
USA: 20 August 1979
Astronomers once believed that planets were probably rare and unusual, and that tere might not be very many planets. However, recent discoveries indicate that planets are far more common; in fact, almost every star that astronomers have closely observed is discovered to have some planets! So it is likely that the "furthest planet in our galaxy" is on the other side of the galaxy from the Earth. The Milky Way galaxy has a radius of about 40,000 light years, and our solar system is about 3/4 of the way out from the center. So the "furthest planet in our galaxy" is probably somewhere near 70,000 light years away.
The Warlord Battle for the Galaxy - 1998 TV was released on: Finland: 1998 (video premiere) UK: 1998 (video premiere) USA: 27 January 1998 Germany: 17 August 1998 (video premiere) UK: 29 March 1999 Germany: 1 May 2003
There are no known new planets. However, planets that are new for us, i.e. that were not previously known, are discovered, at a rate of several hundred planets a year. In other words, there is no "the" new planet.
The Earth and its parent star, the Sun, are located within the Milky Way galaxy, so named by the inhabitants of Earth. The Milky Way galaxy is believed to be a larger-than-average barred spiral galaxy. There may be as many as 300 billion stars in our Milky Way, maybe many more. The nearest galaxy of such enormous class we have named the Andromeda galaxy. It is roughly 2.5 million light-years distant. But there are two tiny galaxies that orbit our own Milky Way; the Large Magellanic Cloud and the Small Magellanic Cloud. They are named for Ferdinand Magellan, the first white dude from the northern hemisphere to make a big noise about them. The Earth is located in the "Orion arm" of our galaxy, somewhere between half and two-thirds of the way out from its hellish center. In a galaxy thought to be 100,000 light years across, we find ourselves in the lucky "habitable zone" of one of its spiral arms.
Jupiter is a planet in the milky way galaxy. Along with all of the other planets in the milky way galaxy, Jupiter has existed approximately 4.5 billion years.
You first have to get past the planets of our solar system (which is IN our galaxy) in order to then make movements to get out of the entire Milky Way galaxy.
The planets are part of the galaxy.
It is possible that every galaxy has some planets. We just are starting to detect some planets in other galaxies.
The planets we know of, some 300 now, are all in the Milky Way galaxy.
Planets are not necessarily in a galaxy but chances are very slim that in a galaxy that is not just newly forming there would not be any exoplanets.
We expect the Andromeda galaxy to be just like our own Milky Way galaxy. We can see stars (suns) in the Andromeda Galaxy and just as stars have planets orbiting them in our galaxy, we believe that there must be planets also orbiting stars in the Andromeda galaxy.
No. I don't believe any planets have been detected outside of our Galaxy. Within our Galaxy, planets are detected by inference not visual techniques. See link for lists of known extrasolar planets
As a matter of fact, yes. It has planets just like the Milky way galaxy.
There are billions of planets and moons in the Star Wars galaxy.
The galaxy is not a planet. The galaxy is MADE of millions and millions of stars and planets.
It is extremely likely, but we cannot yet find planets from that far away. All the planets we have found to date are in our own galaxy. The Andromeda galaxy is 2.5 million light years away whereas our galaxy is about 100,000 light years across.
The Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers - 1986 Battle of the Bandits 1-54 was released on: USA: 26 November 1986