All of them are.
Generally elliptical galaxies are the oldest.
The full question is:What lists the relative sizes from smallest to largest(1) our solar system, universe, Milky Way Galaxy(2) our solar system, Milky Way Galaxy, universe(3) Milky Way Galaxy, our solar system, universe(4) Milky Way Galaxy, universe, our solar system(2) our solar system, Milky Way Galaxy, universe
No. It isn't the smallest one, either.
the universe is bigger than the galaxy because our galaxy (the milky way) is in the universe.
There's only 1 universe the milky way is a galaxy
The order from largest to smallest is universe, galaxy, star, and planet. The universe encompasses everything, including galaxies like the Milky Way. Within galaxies, there are stars like our sun, and planets like Earth.
The universe can be organized in various scales: Planetary system (e.g. our solar system) Galaxy (e.g. Milky Way) Galaxy cluster (group of galaxies) Supercluster (groups of galaxy clusters) Observable universe (everything we can potentially observe)
Nope, other way around: The Milky Way - our home galaxy - is part of the universe.
Universe >> Milky Way galaxy >> Solar System > Sun >> Earth
the milky way is a galaxy. the universe is all of space.
in the milky way galaxy.
biggest to smallest : universe, galaxy, star/solar system, planet, moon. The Universe is everything that exists and a galaxy is a cluster of billions of stars and then planets rotate around stars and moons rotate around planets.
No. In fact, it is one of the largest we know of.