Every star you see is in the Milky Way, so you can say it is visible throughout the year. A particular line that looks like a trail or a sort of milky way goes through the night sky and can also be seen all year round in different constellations.
Yes. Every star that is visible to the naked eye is in the Milky Way galaxy. You need astonishingly powerful telescopes to distinguish even the largest and brightest stars in nearby galaxies.
We are in the Milky Way Galaxy at the end of one of the arms.
Earth is in the milky way the milky way is a galaxy, a spiral galaxy i think and its called the milky way because it looks like milk when you see it at night yo other people who will probably answer like a second after me -Alex
Yes, the Earth is in the Milky Way. Every star you can see in the sky at night is also in the Milky Way. With the naked eye, you cannot see any stars that are not in the Milky Way. The next nearest galaxy is Andromeda and it is just about visible with the naked eye, looking like a hazy dust in the sky, but you would not see any stars in it. It is the furthest thing away that we can see with the naked eye. It is hard to be accurate but it is about 2,500,000 light years away. That is about 14,674,284,000,000,000,000 miles away. To see stars in it, you'd need a very powerful telescope.
there are no other milky way galaxys there is only one so your answer is no
The Milky Way can be seen in the night sky throughout the year. At any one point in time, at least part of the Milky Way will be visible in the night sky. The centre of the Milky Way can be best viewed from the southern hemisphere, and the outer arm (the Perseus Arm) is best seen from the northern hemisphere.
I tink that you can see the milky way from Ingland at night.
No. The Milky Way is the name given to the galaxy in which we live. Mars is a planet, so it can't "have" a Milky Way. It is instead a plant in a solar system that is part of the Milky Way. However, the same Milky Way that is visible here would be visible from Mars, if there was anyone there to see it.
No. Ursa Major and all stars visible from earth are in the Milky Way.
It isn't. Out galaxy is called the Milky Way. This name refers to the spiral arm of the galaxy that is visible across the sky at night as a milky band.
Yes. All stars visible from Earth are in the same relatively small portion of the Milky Way.
Most to all of the milky way is visible through sattelite telescopes as well as other galaxies, but only our local spiral arm is visible from here.
All named stars are within the Milky Way galaxy. In fact all individual stars are within the Milky Way galaxy.
There are billions of suns in the Milky Way, it's a galaxy. Our milky way is forming about 2 suns per year.
In the city of San Bernardino California there are light ordinances. These light ordinances are in effect, because San Bernardino is one of the only places in California that you can see the milky way.
The Milky Way Galaxy is a galaxy ALL the time...
Visually, the Milky Way is the totality of all naked-eye-visible stars in our galaxy, whereas Ursa Major is a tiny few of them.