The center of the elliptical galaxy is very dense with many stars, and density decreases farther out.
The center of the elliptical galaxy is very dense with many stars, and density decreases farther out.
That sounds like the description of an elliptical galaxy.
stars
Our own galaxy, the Milky Way. In general, most stars that have a proper name (as opposed to just a catalog number), and definitely all stars you can see with the naked eye (except for an occasional supernova) are part of our own galaxy.
Actually, it doesn't matter what kind of galaxy it is, because it depends on what kind of stars are in it. If a galaxy has a lot of red giants, it will appear redder than a galaxy with mostly blue-white stars. Older galaxies might be redder than younger galaxies due to the fact that older stars appear redder.
it looks like a cluster of stars. it kind of looks like a clould. by Eva
You may be describing a "barred spiral" galaxy.
The noun 'galaxy' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an extremely large group of stars and planets; a large group of impressive people or things. The noun 'galaxy' is used as a collective noun for a galaxy of stars (heavenly luminescence or human luminaries).
because they have not developed that kind technology yet and have not finished the research they are doing now .
The question is somewhat confusing, so I am not sure what you mean. The Milky Way is a galaxy; it has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years; it has between 100 and 400 billion stars (the exact number is not known).
No. The largest known galaxy of its kind is the spiral galaxy Malin 1.
Well, the phrase "typical galaxy" begs a debate in itself (smile), but the most commonly heard figure for "stars in a typical galaxy" is 100 billion. And many astronomers believe there may be 100 billion galaxies in the known universe. The math gets kind of heavy duty!