No. Because such a combination can never exist.
No, it is because of the Earth rotating on its axis.
Yes. The earth spins on its axis and it orbits the sun. The solar system is also orbiting the center of the Milky Way, and the Milky Way itself is moving among the other galaxies in the universe. Really, there is NOTHING that is not moving. Where would it be?
There no milky way in sky there is only milky way galaxy
The Milky Way galaxy is.... called the Milky Way Galaxy
The Sun is not tilted in the way that some planets are; it rotates on its axis, but its axis is not significantly tilted relative to its orbit around the Milky Way galaxy. However, its axis is tilted slightly in relation to its orbit around the center of the galaxy.
The Sun partakes in the general rotation of the galaxy (the Milky Way Galaxy rotates once about every 225 million years). This corresponds to an average velocity of about 220 km/s.
The galaxy that contains Earth and the rest of the Solar system is the Milky Way galaxy.
The question is kind of vague.The Earth orbits the Sun, and it also rotates on its own axis. ?Along with that, the solar system as a whole orbits the barycenter of the Milky Way galaxy, and the Milky Way as a whole is moving approximately towards the Andromeda galaxy.
Good question - The black hole(s) (i.e. Sagittarius A*) at the center of the Milky Way are estimated to be a little more than 4 million solar masses (e.g. stars like our Sun). The Milky Way galaxy is a barred spiral galaxy 100,000-120,000 light-years in diameter and has been estimated to be hosting 200-400 billion stars, and at least as many planets. Therefore the answer is that the accumulated mass of the Milky Way galaxy (of course excluding its centric black hole(s)) is greater than the mass of the black hole(s) at the center of the Milky Way.
Zero. We are in it
the milky way is just the name of our galaxy, there isn't really a "milky way"