No. Somewhere in the constellation Sagittarius is.
The galactic centre is the central region of a galaxy. Most, if not all galaxies have a supermassive black hole at their centre.
The Milky Ways Galactic core. A supermassive black hole at the centre of our Galaxy.
Solar system is in Milky Way galaxy. It is located at the centre of Milky Way.
The sun is the center of the universe, and the planets revolve around it.
The centre of a galaxy is composed of many different types of stars, these can be yellow, blue, orange etc. The centre of a galaxy usually also contains interstellar dust. looking at galaxies from afar, all these factors give the centre of a galaxy a white color in the visible spectrum, as white light is a mixture if all the colors.
The oldest stars in a galaxy are usually located towards the centre. Also known as the bulge.
No. The sun is in the centre of our solar system. In the centre of our galaxy, the Milky Way, there is probably a black hole.
No. "Universe". We can see things outside our galaxy.
The Sun is one of a billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. It is a little less than a quarter of the way out from the centre of the galaxy. Think of yourself standing a quarter of the way out from the centre of a huge crowd. If you look towards the centre, you will see a huge number of people but even looking in the opposite direction there will be lots. So whichever direction you look in, there will be loads of people. It is only if you look up or down - across the plane of the crowd - will the numbers thin out. I hope this analogy works for you.
Galactic centre.
The main difference - is the centre of the galaxy. The heliocentric theory placed the Sun at the centre of our galaxy - the previous 'geocentric' theory placed the Earth at the centre.
The Sun is the centre of the solar system, and only that. It is not even remotly close to being in the centre of the milky way galaxy.
Milky way is the galaxy in which our Earth and the parent star Sun are located.
At the centre of our Galaxy, the Milky Way
The Supermassive Black Hole at the centre.
A quasar will have the brightest galactic centre.
To be factually correct, there isn't any light at the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy as it's a super massive black hole - and no light escapes. We cannot observe this area of the Galaxy in the visible spectrum because of all the galactic dust in the way.