-
To answer this question, we must first define "what is the solar system", that is, determine the boundaries of the solar system. Different definitions will have different results. If the orbit of Neptune is the boundary, according to what is said upstairs (if it is in the Milky Way), there should be.
If you take the Kuiper belt or even the Oort cloud as the boundary, in my opinion, such a huge planet may not exist. In addition, the Milky Way is smaller in diameter (compared to the observable cosmic scale) and larger stars have shorter lifetimes, and in the 15 billion years since the universe began, even stars large enough to compare with the solar system may have long since disappeared. Other planets, such as planets, comets, etc., are not even bigger (compared to the Sun).
Therefore, I believe that the existence of a planet larger than the solar system is less likely.
-
Seamount II is bigger than the solar system!
Seamount is also the largest star ever observed. According to the Earth, which is 7,500 light-years away, it is about 4 million times brighter than the Sun. Seamount II is a bright blue variable star, which is extremely unstable, often undergoing very large eruptions, during which even its shape changes from round to dumbbell-shaped.
And the volume will be even larger than the solar system!
The year 1841 was the highest recorded peak of activity on the two planets of the Seamount. During this period, the brightness was even higher than that of Sirius, so much so that the star could be seen during the day. At present, Seamount II is already in the late stage of development, and its activity is declining.
A large planetary nebula has formed on his periphery - generally found on the periphery of dead stars. But Seamount II continues to erupt violently. It is believed that Seamount II will eventually become a supernova.
-
Of course. Because, the origin of the world is originally big** The whole world is still expanding infinitely Of course, there are planets that are bigger than the Earth By the way, the recent news says that European scientists have discovered that there are planets in the Milky Way that are very similar to the Earth, with much larger mass and volume than the Earth You can just look at the recent news
-
Please do not talk nonsense on the first floor, and pay attention to the scientific nature of your speech. A contemptible person can casually name hundreds of stars that are heavier than the sun.
What has more mass than the stars in the sun is that if the landlord lives in the city and can only see a few dozen stars (stars), their masses are greater than that of the sun.
The brightest star with a mass lighter than the Sun is the constellation E. Poe, which is considered equal and difficult to see in the city (3 magnitude in the city is already good).
-
Yes, the Milky Way includes the Solar System, the Milky Way is larger than the Solar System and larger than the Earth-Moon System, and the Milky Way is made up of.
There are many galaxies like the solar system, there should be.
-
Most of them go to the asteroid belt in the solar system that is larger than the sun.
-
No, if there is, it is also a planet that is useless for the Milky Way.
-
Of course there is, the universe is so big.
-
According to the results of current observations, there are many larger than the sun, and some are even thousands of times larger than the sun.
-
The Milky Way is larger than the solar system
The Milky Way is the galaxy to which the Earth and the Sun belong, and the Milky Way is the star system where the solar system is located, including 120 billion stars and a large number of star clusters, nebulae, as well as various types of interstellar gas and interstellar dust.
The Solar System is a galaxy of the Milky Way, a barred spiral galaxy with a massive disk structure consisting of a bright dense nuclear sphere, two major spiral arms, and two unformed spiral arms, which are 4,500 light-years apart. The total mass of the Milky Way is about 100 billion solar masses. If the average mass of stars is similar to that of the Sun, there are about 100 billion stars in the Milky Way.
It follows that the Milky Way is much larger than the solar system.
The composition of the Milky WayThe Milky Way galaxy is composed from the inside to the outside, including the galactic heart, the galactic core, the galactic disk, the galactic halo, and the galactic crown. Most of the Milky Way** regions are old stars (mainly white dwarfs), and the outer regions are mostly nascent and young stars. There are more than a dozen satellite galaxies scattered around an area of hundreds of thousands of light-years, and the Milky Way grows by slowly devouring the surrounding dwarf galaxies.
-
The Milky Way is big. The Milky Way, the barred spiral galaxy where the solar system is located, includes 1000-400 billion stars and a large number of star clusters, nebulae, and various types of interstellar gas and interstellar dust. The total mass of the Milky Way is about a trillion times that of the Solar System.
Introduction to the Milky Way.
The Milky Way galaxy is composed from the inside to the outside, including the galactic heart, the galactic core, the galactic disk, the galactic halo, and the galactic crown. The Milky Way has two companion galaxies: the Large Magellanic Galaxy and the Small Magellanic Galaxy.
The Milky Way passes through 25 constellations, including Cygnus, Aquila, Fox, Sagittarius, Ophiuchus, Shield, Sagittarius, Scorpio, Tiantan, Ruler, Jackal, South Triangle, etc.
The Milky Way is different in light and dark in the sky, wide and narrow. The narrowest is only 4° 5°, and the widest is about 30°. The individual stars that humans currently see with the naked eye in various parts of the sky are part of the Milky Way.
-
Is the solar system the largest galaxy in the entire galaxy? Not the largest galaxy. The Milky Way, also known as the Cosmic Island, refers to a celestial system consisting of countless stars and planetary systems, small stars, dust, etc.
In the universe that we can observe, scientists estimate that there are about 2 trillion galaxies. The Milky Way is huge, but this galaxy is 20,000 times larger than the Milky Way, and how big is the largest galaxy.
The Milky Way we are in is only medium-sized galaxies, and there are many galaxies in the universe that are larger than ours. For example, the closest neighbor to our galaxy, the Andromeda Galaxy, is twice as large as ours. But the Andromeda Galaxy is also not the largest known galaxy in the universe.
Currently, the laurel belongs to a galaxy named IC 1101, located in the Albert 2029 galaxy county, which is about 100 million lights from Earth, and is also the central galaxy of the galaxy county.
The IC1101 galaxy has a diameter of about 4.2 million lights (i.e., 6 million lights), which is about 27 times the diameter of the Milky Way, and its volume can accommodate about 20,000 galaxies. With the combined size of the Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy, IC1101 can also hold tens of thousands. If IC 1101 is located in the center of the local Milky Way Group, where our Milky Way is located, then the Milky Way, the Andromeda Galaxy, the Triangulum Galaxy, the Large Magellanic Galaxy, the Small Magellanic Galaxy, etc., will all be located in this galaxy.
Our Milky Way is 2.54 million light-years from the Andromeda Galaxy and nearly 3 million lights from the Triangulum Galaxy.
IC 1101 is a spherical galaxy with a much larger mass than our Milky Way and contains hundreds of billions of stars, and astronomical observations show that the stars within this galaxy are now called parametal stars, indicating that the stars in this galaxy are also evolving relatively quickly. Astronomers have also discovered that the center of this galaxy has a very bright ex-ante force. I think it's possible that there is a huge black hole 40 100 billion times the sun, just because the large number of stars and nebulae around this galaxy is blocked, and it is not possible to look closely at the situation of its central black hole, but many scientists speculate that this central black hole in Jiangxi has the power to challenge the largest known black hole, ton618 (66 billion times the mass of the sun).
-
The Milky Way is a very large star system in the universe that contains hundreds of billions of stars, planets, and other celestial bodies. The solar system is a small part of the Milky Way, consisting of the sun and the eight planets and their accompanying celestial bodies.
In contrast, the Milky Way is much larger than the solar system. According to scientists' estimates, the diameter of the Milky Way is about 100,000 light-years, while the size of the Sun's large trace system is only tens of billions of kilometers. In addition, the mass of the Milky Way is also much larger than that of the Solar System, which is estimated to be about 100 times the mass of the Milky Way.
The vast difference between the Milky Way and the Solar System lies in their scale and composition. The Milky Way is one of the largest structures in the universe and contains a large number of stellar clusters and nebulae, many of which are much brighter and larger than the Sun. The Solar System, on the other hand, is just a system of planets around an ordinary star, which, despite its historical significance, is relatively small and insignificant in the universe as a whole.
Although the Milky Way is much larger than the Solar System, in the process of human exploration of the universe, the Solar System has brought us countless surprises and discoveries, such as the planets, stars and comets in the solar system. In addition, through the study of the solar system, mankind has also gained a deeper understanding of the formation and evolution of planets and the universe.
Therefore, both the Milky Way and the Solar System have great significance and value in their respective fields.
-
The Milky Way is larger than the solar system
The Milky Way consists of 1000 400 billion stars and a large number of star clusters, nebulae and various types of interstellar gas and interstellar dust. With a total mass of about 210 billion times that of the Sun, it belongs to the local group of galaxies, and the nearest extragalactic galaxy is the Dwarf Canis Major galaxy, 42,000 light-years away.
The Milky Way is an oblate sphere with a massive disk structure consisting of a bright and dense core, two major spiral arms, and two unformed spiral arms, which are 4,500 light-years apart. The Sun is located on the Orion Arm, a branch of the Milky Way, and the distance from the center of the Milky Way is about 10,000 light-years.
The solar system is a collection of celestial bodies centered on the Sun and subject to the Sun's gravitational constraints. Including the eight planets.
In order from near to far from the Sun: Mercury.
Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter.
Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) and at least 173 known moons, 5 identified dwarf planets, and hundreds of millions of small solar system bodies.
Broadly speaking, the realm of the solar system includes the sun, four inner planets like the Earth, an asteroid belt made up of many small rocks, four huge outer planets filled with gas, and small rocks filled with ice known as the Kuiper belt.
The second small celestial region.
-
The order from smallest to largest is as follows: Meteorite (meteorite) Moon (satellite) Earth-Moon system (planet) Solar system (star) Orion (nebula) Milky Way (galaxy) Virgo Supercluster (star field) Inner Universe Outer Universe ......
-
This kind of question is also asked? What is the sun? It's just a speck of dust in the galaxy. Not to mention the sun, the entire solar system can only be a speck of dust in the Milky Way.
-
The Milky Way is big, and the Solar System is in the middle of the Milky Way.
The solar system is a system of planets bound together by the sun's gravitational pull, including the sun and celestial bodies that move directly or indirectly around the sun. Of the celestial bodies that move directly around the Sun, the eight largest are called planets[c], and the rest are much smaller than planets, such as dwarf planets, solar system asteroids, and comets. The celestial bodies whose orbits indirectly orbit the Sun are satellites, two of which are larger than the smallest planet, Mercury.
The Milky Way galaxy (formerly known as the Milky Way, Tianhe, Xinghe, Tianhan, Yinhan, etc.) is a barred spiral galaxy containing the solar system. The diameter is between 100,000 and 180,000 light years. It is estimated to have between 100 billion and 400 billion stars and possibly 100 billion planets.
The Solar System is about 26,000 light-years from the center of the Milky Way, on the inner edge of a spiral arm known as the Orion Arm, which is dense with gas and dust. At the position of the Sun, the orbital period is about 240 million years. Viewed from Earth, the Milky Way appears as a band around the celestial sphere because it is from the inside of the disk-like structure outward**.