Cosmic rays can be found throughout the universe, including in space and on Earth. They originate from sources such as supernovae, black holes, pulsars, and other high-energy cosmic events. They constantly bombard Earth's atmosphere, but can also be detected in space by satellites and telescopes.
This completely depends on the speed of the observed galaxy, the speed of the galaxy the observer resides in, and in which direction both galaxies are moving in relation to each other. There are too many variables to provide an answer at this time.
No. Everything in out solar system is in our galaxy, the Milky Way.
All stars we currently know of are part of a galaxy. Stars are born within galaxies from clouds of gas and dust. If a star were to exist without belonging to a galaxy, it would likely be a result of very rare and extreme circumstances, such as being ejected from its parent galaxy due to a collision or interaction with another galaxy.
If it exists it is not known by most observers.
If you mean Collison then Yes. The Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy will collide in about 3 - 5 Billion years from now.
yes
that has not scientifically proven yet and only time can tell us. but i highly doubt it
cosmic noise
at a vans shop or customize them
there is no name but i call it, "Cosmic Mario."
yes,walk into them
Based on a conservative estimation of rotational time around the galaxy, the next "cosmic year" will be in about 110 million years.
Cosmic rays can be found throughout the universe, including in space and on Earth. They originate from sources such as supernovae, black holes, pulsars, and other high-energy cosmic events. They constantly bombard Earth's atmosphere, but can also be detected in space by satellites and telescopes.
use a comet
Hank Frisco Galaxy Defender - 2011 Last Cosmic Standing 1-3 was released on: USA: 12 February 2012
This completely depends on the speed of the observed galaxy, the speed of the galaxy the observer resides in, and in which direction both galaxies are moving in relation to each other. There are too many variables to provide an answer at this time.