No, our Solar System is just one of billions of stellar systems in the Milky Way.
Io is part of our solar system, so it is in the same galaxy that we are in: the Milky Way.
The same as it is now: the Solar System, in the Milky Way Galaxy.
No. Alpha Centauri is the nearest star system to our own solar system at just over 4 light years away.. The Milky Way Galaxy is an enormous collection of stars about 100,000 light years across. It includes our solar system, Alpha Centauri, and about 200 billion other stars.
they are all planets. they are all in the milky way galaxy. they are all in the same solar system. they all orbit the sun. hope this helps :)
Yes. There are thousands of different solar systems in milky way, the same galaxy as ours exist in.
It is the nearest star to our solar system an in the same galaxy as us, the Milky Way.
Venus is in our solar system and so it is in the same galaxy as we are. We are in the Milky Way galaxy, as are all the stars that you can see.
The same as the rest of the Solar System - about 25,000 light years
These are the basics. Our sun is the star at the center of our solar system. A solar system is made up of a star and any other objects connected to it by its gravity. Our sun has the standard eight planets along with their moons, and also countless other objects including asteroids and comets. Our galaxy, The Milky Way, is estimated to contain between 200 billion and 400 billion stars. Some of those stars have planets orbiting them, and others do not. Our solar system then is just a very very tiny part of the Milky Way, and the Milky Way is one of billions of observable galaxies throughout space.
All the planets in the solar system are approximately the same age. Extrasolar planets are all approximately the same age as the star they orbit. Population II (low metallicity) stars are the oldest stars, but they're unlikely to have planets.
Our solar system doesn't really travel 'through' the Milky Way, but it does travel around the galaxy's center. The Milky Way is turning, and we are turning along with it. Even over very long periods of time, our position relative to other stars in the galaxy remains about the same. But we are moving around, just the same.
Saturn is in our galaxy, the Milky Way. Answer Saturn is indeed in the Milky Way, a spiral galaxy containing billions of stars and the particular star, the Sun at the centre of the Solar System we inhabit which contains all the planets from Mercury to Neptune and many dwarf planets and plutons like Pluto.