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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "22._If_the_Sun_explodes,_will_it_affect_or_wipe_out_the_Milky_Way_Galaxy" retrieved in 0.060 sec with these stats:

  • "22" found 32761 times in 13178 documents
  • "if" found 10820 times in 3231 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "sun" found 6879 times in 4387 documents
  • "explod" found 499 times in 425 documents
  • "will" found 24730 times in 5032 documents
  • "it" found 81427 times in 11675 documents
  • "affect" found 1167 times in 921 documents
  • "or" found 21946 times in 6355 documents
  • "wipe" found 34 times in 33 documents
  • "out" found 14154 times in 3695 documents
  • "milki" found 416 times in 269 documents
  • "way" found 7053 times in 2483 documents
  • "galaxi" found 2322 times in 814 documents



... the Sun will have very little influence over the life of the other 400 billion stars found in our Milky Way Galaxy. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
... or it would soon go out The mystery remained until the twentieth century when scientists discovered that the Sun was powered by fusion-the conversion of hydrogen into helium with the enormous release of energy. Nuclear fusion has provided the Sun ...
Astronomers think that the Milky Way formed out of the collapse of a large cloud of gas, similar in some respects to the way that stars form. ---- Answer provided by Dirk Terrell, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...
... the Earth, the Sun's light is spread around by the atmosphere, and so the sky looks blue. Where there is no atmosphere, this cannot happen, so the sky looks black. If you stand on some planets, the sky has funny colors because the atmosphere is different from the one we know—for instance, on Mars the sky looks red ...
... a very predictable way. There are many computer programs that can track objects in space even if they can't be seen. If you somehow left the galaxy you could find your way home again. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book ...
If you go to a really dark location in the country, late on a summer night, you will see how the Milky Way got its name. There are so many stars, so close together and so far ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - GALAXY, SOLAR SYSTEM and UNIVERSE
... it hard to think in thousands of millions of miles. When we leave our solar system and think of our galaxy, the Milky Way, it is so much more immense that we have to use different ways to describe distances. So we use light years. That sounds like a measurement of time, but it is not. It ...
The Milky Way was formed shortly after the big bang, like all of the galaxies. After the initial expansion, areas that were denser than others were pulled together by their own gravity into galaxies. Within a galaxy, dense regions of hydrogen gas were pulled together to form stars and clusters of stars. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
Navigation outside of the Milky Way wouldn't be difficult since we have reasonably good maps of objects like quasars that ... provided by Dirk Terrell, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
From orbit, the Milky Way would look very similar to the way it does here on Earth. It would be brighter and you would have an easier time seeing the distinct stars, but otherwise it would look the same. ---- Answer ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - GALAXY, SOLAR SYSTEM and UNIVERSE

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