Question:
Do all galaxies goes around the sun.? Our Sun.?
doorseeker
2006-08-22 13:15:34 UTC
Do all galaxies goes around the sun.? Our Sun.?
34 answers:
Kerintok
2006-08-22 13:23:32 UTC
In fact, NO galaxies orbit the sun. Our Sun is the center of our solar system, but it is nowhere near the center of our Galaxy (the Milky Way).



Our Solar Systems is located on one of the outer arms of the Milky Way and is a relatively small system within the Milky Way. The Current hypothesis about the center of our galaxy (the one with the most credence) is that there are a cluster of Black Holes at the center (perhaps millions) around which the rest of the galaxy orbits.
synjin21
2006-08-22 13:44:43 UTC
Galaxies do not go around the sun. Within galaxies are solar systems, which are the planets and the suns. Planets go around the sun within a solar system which are within a galaxy which is usually within a cluster of other galaxies which are revolving but around what is not definitively determined - possibly a blackhole. The galaxies as a cluster are also moving in an outward direction - away from one another - indicating that the universe is expanding. I hope this helps you.
Cirric
2006-08-22 13:22:54 UTC
Hi. No galaxy goes around our Sun. Our Sun goes around inside the Milky Way galaxy.
Subakthi D
2006-08-28 22:25:37 UTC
No. It is our solar system that goes around the sun. The Milky Way , which is only just another galaxy from billions of galaxies in the universe revolves around its own axis. Do not misunderstand to think that our sun is the centre of the universe.
PC
2006-08-24 13:17:54 UTC
My suggestion to you is do a little reading before asking a question like this. Our sun is merely a single star in the Milky Way Galaxy which has billions of stars. All of these stars rotate around the galaxy like a giant whirlpool in a matter of speaking. Our sun is on in a small, unnoticable area on one of the outer arms (or bands). Our galaxy, in turn, is one of millions of galaxies in the universe. So in this respect, our sun is truly not much to write home about, and no Earth is not at the center of everything.
SOMEGUY
2006-08-22 13:23:48 UTC
Planets go around the sun. But Galaxies are different. They have many suns and rotate. What I would like to know is what is in the center of a galaxy that makes the stars rotate around them.
soxrcat
2006-08-30 02:56:13 UTC
We are one Solar system in the Galaxy we call "The Milky Way." Planets revolve around the Sun and the Sun and its system rotates in the Galaxy. There are possibly billions and billions of galaxies in our universe.
alan_mesfin
2006-08-30 11:55:35 UTC
No. Firstly, our galaxy does not revolve around the Sun. The Sun is the centre of our solar system, but our solar system revolves around the centre of our galaxy (Milky Way). Secondly galaxies in general don't revolve around a star (like our Sun). We don't quite know what is in the centre of our galaxy or any other.
Gramms
2006-08-30 07:08:41 UTC
Only our solar system goes around our sun! Every Star you see out there is a sun and has it's own solar system. There are many solar systems within a galaxy, and many galaxies within the universe.
jonfal
2006-08-22 13:26:59 UTC
We're (our solar system: sun and nine or so planets) a very small part of our galaxy, which is traveling through space along with all the other galaxies, space dust, nebulae etc. from an origin point that is many light years away.
anonymous
2006-08-30 00:30:28 UTC
Planets orbit around the sun. In our galaxy there are 9 such planets. A galaxy is composed of many, many, many, stars like our own sun. Our galaxy is called the Milky Way. There are many, many, many, galaxies in the universe.
Rob
2006-08-22 13:24:25 UTC
nope. planets go around the sun. Galaxies have many suns (stars) that revolve within them. Our Galaxy is the Milky Way.
anonymous
2006-08-22 15:12:15 UTC
No. This galaxy, the Milky Way, has billions of stars and our sun is one of those stars. All of the stars revolve around the galaxies core. There are also billions of other galaxies in various shapes and sizes.
iandanielx
2006-08-22 13:25:53 UTC
None of them go around our sun.



Our galaxy rotates around a black hole (as most do), with a mass of around 2 billion of our suns. But the galaxies as a whole generally move away from all other galaxies (due to the expanding universe), with the exeption of local galactic clusters whose gravaties keep them near each other.



The only things moving around our sun are a bunch of planets and asteroids, and some comets use its gravity occasionally.



There are billions of galaxies in the universe, and we have visual and radio confirmation of thousands of them.
Composer
2006-08-29 21:37:40 UTC
Solar Systems go around a star (or stars). Our solar system (which actually has no name, just like the moon is the only moon that lacks a name) goes around the Sun (which is the name of a particular star.) All Galaxies are theorized to revolve around Supermassive Black Holes (a specific type of black hole.)
sam21462
2006-08-22 13:23:11 UTC
Nope .. our sun orbits our galaxy and our galaxy dances about with other galaxies. Ours is just a backwater little star on the edge of an unimportant galaxy.
krsrinath2
2006-08-28 02:15:38 UTC
Nope not at all...

The milky way galaxy it self has millions of stars in it & they all revolve and rotate...

each solar system has its own star...

So why would would all "GALAXIES" go around the sun. Our Sun.
lil hands
2006-08-28 21:23:17 UTC
NO BECAUSE THE SUN IS IN THE MILKY WAY GALAXY AND ITS THE CLOSEST SO THATS THE ONLY ONE OTHER GALAXIES WE DON'T HAVE MUCH INFO ON THE OR THERE FAR AWAY FROM THE SUN
Vince M
2006-08-22 13:45:54 UTC
"Kerintok" gives a very good, easy to understand answer, while "abbie" does not know what she is talking about.



Add to all the other good information, that our galaxy also goes around in a local galactic cluster.



And all this is just a part of a much larger unverse of galaxies and stars!
Mutya P
2006-08-30 02:01:18 UTC
Yes, as shown in the picture of the galaxy
?
2016-11-05 13:51:58 UTC
average fee between the two, (earth and sunlight) could be seen, yet while it includes the fee of earth while on the component of orbit overtaking sunlight, the fee is greater advantageous. i think of they're so minuscule in terms of the size of the galaxy that it is not suitable that they are shifting besides...
kemchan2
2006-08-30 04:11:24 UTC
the sun orbits the center of the milky way galaxy...galaxies orbit each other.
savage garden
2006-08-30 03:38:45 UTC
no galaxies go around around the sun ,,,u son,,of a gun
abbie
2006-08-22 13:24:38 UTC
dude... there is only 1 sun and there is only 1 galaxie that we no about but we thank there is a lot more but we cant find any more!
D'oh!
2006-08-22 13:22:33 UTC
I thought the galaxy revolved around me.

Go figure.
iknowtruthismine
2006-08-22 14:39:41 UTC
You don't know what a galaxy is, do you?
DAD
2006-08-29 13:47:40 UTC
no each galaxy has its own center
anonymous
2006-08-22 13:26:12 UTC
Nope.
Luigi
2006-08-28 13:56:17 UTC
noo galaxies typicaly revolve aroud a black hole a large black hole
anonymous
2006-08-28 21:37:48 UTC
our sun.
anonymous
2006-08-22 18:37:16 UTC
nope
anonymous
2006-08-22 13:22:40 UTC
No
Ajay A
2006-08-30 06:06:39 UTC
no
postaljack
2006-08-26 03:14:12 UTC
NOOOPPPPPPPEEEEEE!


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