Perhaps you mean "thought to be"? - It is believed that all, or most, galaxies have a supermassive black hole at their center.
Not all galaxies, but it is believed that the majority of galaxies have central black holes.
Elliptical galaxies are generally round or oval in shape, lacking the distinctive spiral arms seen in spiral galaxies. They typically have a smooth and featureless appearance, with older star populations and little ongoing star formation. Elliptical galaxies also tend to be more massive and contain mainly older stars.
The galactic centre is the central region of a galaxy. Most, if not all galaxies have a supermassive black hole at their centre.
The observation that galaxies are moving away from us is a result of the expansion of the universe, not because we are at its center. The universe is expanding uniformly, which means that every galaxy sees other galaxies moving away from it, regardless of its position. This phenomenon is described by the Big Bang theory and the cosmological principle, which states that the universe is homogeneous and isotropic on large scales. Therefore, no specific location can be considered the center of the universe.
Almost every galaxy has a super massive black hole in its centre and this fact is widely accepted now days . Milky way galaxy also have a super massive black hole of its own, weighing more than 4 million times more than our sun's mass. Andromeda galaxy is our nearest neighbour having a super massive black hole in its centre weighing 114 million solar masses .
they all contain billions of stars that orbit the center of the galaxy. all galaxies are also moving very slow.
Not all galaxies have a black hole at their center. Some galaxies, like our own Milky Way, do have a supermassive black hole at their center, while others do not.
Basically, all galaxies do. Or most of them.
Not all galaxies, but it is believed that the majority of galaxies have central black holes.
It is hypothesized that almost all galaxies have super massive black holes in their center.
Not all galaxies have black holes in their centers, but many large galaxies, including our own Milky Way, are believed to have supermassive black holes at their centers.
Yes, However all galaxies are the same (simplified): A bunch of solar systems turning around a massive black hole. The forms are often very different, you have elliptical (elliptic formed) galaxies, spiral ("arms" from the center turning around it, circular) galaxies and irregular (irregular ;P) galaxies.
All galaxies are massive clusters of stars scattered across the universe. Many galaxies take the same form, for instance, spiral and elliptical galaxies. Some galaxies also have a black hole in their center.
It is believed that all galaxies have a black hole at their centers.
Other galaxies are moving away because the universe is expanding, but we are not at the centre of the universe.
ALL larger galaxies have a black hole in their center.
All galaxies are massive clusters of stars scattered across the universe. Many galaxies take the same form, for instance, spiral and elliptical galaxies. Some galaxies also have a black hole in their center.