Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.
Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.
Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.
Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.
The Solar System is at a distance of about 25,000 light-years from the center of the Milky Way, and takes an estimated 200 million years to do one full revolution around the center of the Milky Way.
The solar system is the Milky Way galaxy, Earth, and all other planets and galaxies are the solar system.
The Milky Way doesn't really rotate around anything. Our home galaxy and nearby Andromeda are pretty much at the center of what is called a local group of gravitationally bound galaxies. As such, it is unsupportable to say that the Milky Way rotates around anything else.
yes.............
The Milky Way appears to have a huge (even for a black hole) gravitational object at the center of it, and this is supposed by a lot of scientists to be a black hole. The arms of our galaxy sweep around the center.
Our Sun orbits around the center of our galaxy -- the Milky Way
Yea We are in the center of the milky way
Yes! The sun rotates on its axis about every 27 days. It also has two types of revolution. First it revolves around the center of mass of the solar system every 11 to 12 years. Also it revolves around the center of the Milky Way galaxy.
No, the sun is gravitationally bound to the Milky Way galaxy. Its orbit around the galactic center keeps it within the Milky Way.
Somewhere around 26,000 light-years.
No, the sun does not orbit a black hole in the center of our galaxy. The sun orbits around the center of the Milky Way galaxy, where there is a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A.
No
I'm assuming your not an intergalactic, extraterrestrial and that your galaxy is the same as my galaxy - the Milky Way. There is overwhelming evidence that a super-massive black hole is at the center of the Milky Way.
Center or whole? 0 miles if it's the whole galaxy because Earth is IN the Milky Way Galaxy but IDK center.
our galaxy contains between 200- to 400-billion stars arranged in a giant disc shape. The diameter is 100,000 light years with an average thickness of 10,000 light years. The Earth is located about 28,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way.
Most astrophysicists believe that there is a supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way.
The milky way