The galaxy is covered in dust.
A large but very faint layer of stars surrounds the disk and bulge. In addition to stars, the Milky Way contains clouds of gas and dust called nebulae.
The Milky Way galaxy contains a variety of stars, including main sequence stars (like our Sun), giants, supergiants, white dwarfs, and neutron stars. The most common stars are red dwarfs, making up about 70-80% of all stars in the Milky Way. There are also many other types of stars, such as yellow dwarfs (like our Sun), blue giants, and red giants.
The Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy that contains our solar system, while Centaurus is a constellation in the southern sky. The Milky Way is a vast collection of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter, while Centaurus is a grouping of stars in the night sky as seen from Earth. The Milky Way is a physical entity in space, while Centaurus is a visual grouping of stars from our perspective on Earth.
It would appear as a cloud of stars, just like the Milky Way.
There are about 2e11 stars in the Milky Way galaxy. As there are about 1e11 galaxies in the universe, perhaps averaging 1e11 stars per each, that makes the number of stars in the universe roughly 1e22.For e (exponent) you could write x10^Our Milky Way i s a GALAXY. These are many billions of stars bound together in a plane. Galaxy's are not 3D. Depending on from which direction you view a galaxy it can look like a pancake, or it can just look like a line or band from left to right. We see our Milky way as a band of stars because we are viewing it from within, thus, viewing it as a line or band.
It's doubtful if a civilization could still exist within an elliptical galaxy due to the age of the stars. If they could, then the sky would have a slight red tinge, nothing like the Milky Way.
The Milky Way appears as a faint band of light stretching across the night sky, made up of billions of stars and interstellar dust. It can be seen as a hazy, milky-white strip on clear, dark nights away from city lights.
milky, like a river of stars
In Astronomy, it is often not possible to answer the question "why". The Milky Way is the name that ancient farmers used to describe the appearance of our galaxy; like a trail of spilled milk in the sky. They knew little about the stars, nothing about galaxies, and described what they saw. Today we use the phrase "Milky Way" to describe our galaxy as seen from within; countless stars off in the direction of the galactic center, which we see all smudged together because there are so many, and so far away.
The Milky Way is visible in the night sky as a faint band of light stretching across the darkness. It is best seen in areas with minimal light pollution, away from city lights. Look for a hazy, milky-white band of stars and dust clouds arching overhead.
Our galaxy is visible in a night sky that is not obscured by clouds or city lights. It's a band of stars called the milky way. Because we are in it and it's flat like a plate we see it edgewise so it looks like a band of stars that kind of blur together.
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.
The Milky Way is a vast collection of stars. It has no surface.
people usually say milky white, because all the stars together look like milky white.
The Milky Way galaxy contains a variety of stars, including main sequence stars (like our Sun), giants, supergiants, white dwarfs, and neutron stars. The most common stars are red dwarfs, making up about 70-80% of all stars in the Milky Way. There are also many other types of stars, such as yellow dwarfs (like our Sun), blue giants, and red giants.
The stars in the Milky Way move in the opposite direction of the sun.
The Milky Way is not a place you can be on, it is our galaxy which we are part of. From earth it looks like a milky white band across the sky (thus the name).
Like a long (milky colored) cloud in the sky - that moves with the stars and not the wind.