Nebulae are giant clouds of gas and dust in space where stars form. As these nebulae collapse under gravity, they can also give rise to the formation of planetary systems like our solar system. The dust and gas within the nebulae can clump together to form planets and other celestial bodies as the star at the center of the nebula ignites and begins its life cycle.
Floating about in space as nebulae.
A solar system refers to a star and all the objects that orbit it, such as planets, moons, asteroids, and comets. On the other hand, a galaxy is a vast system of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter held together by gravity. Our solar system is just one small part of the Milky Way galaxy.
No. There is one star in our solar system, and no other solar systems within it.
There are no exoplanets in our solar system. By definition, an exoplanet is a planet that is not in our solar system.
it is how the solar system started
Stars, star clusters, distant galaxies, galaxy clusters, nebulae, ...
That is called an accretion disk or a proto-Solar system.
Nebulae are giant clouds of gas and dust in space where stars form. As these nebulae collapse under gravity, they can also give rise to the formation of planetary systems like our solar system. The dust and gas within the nebulae can clump together to form planets and other celestial bodies as the star at the center of the nebula ignites and begins its life cycle.
It is generally not possible to see nebulae with the naked eye due to their low surface brightness. Most are best viewed with telescopes or binoculars, as these tools can gather more light and help in distinguishing the faint details of nebulae.
There are things like beautiful nebulae, millions of stars, most likely other planets and moons, and many other things.
Floating about in space as nebulae.
You see million years ago there was a HUGE clump of gases which they call "nebulae" well the gases formed together and then came are star the Sun.
A solar system refers to a star and all the objects that orbit it, such as planets, moons, asteroids, and comets. On the other hand, a galaxy is a vast system of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter held together by gravity. Our solar system is just one small part of the Milky Way galaxy.
Because the nebula has gas and rock/ice/dirt so each planet formed using gas and rock/ice/dirt.
Edwin Powell Hubble has written: 'The nebulous envelope around Nova Aquilae no. 3' -- subject(s): Clusters, Stars 'The velocity-distance relation among extra-galactic nebulae' -- subject(s): Nebulae 'Photographic investigations of faint nebulae' -- subject(s): Nebulae 'Distribution of luminosity in elliptical nebulae' -- subject(s): Nebulae 'The Edwin Hubble papers' -- subject(s): Sources, Nebulae, History 'The nature of science, and other lectures' -- subject(s): Science 'A general study of diffuse galactic nebulae' -- subject(s): Nebulae 'Our sample of the universe' -- subject(s): Astronomy, Nebulae, Cosmology 'A spiral nebula as a steller system' -- subject(s): Nebulae
"Our solar system." The "part of our galaxy" that's in our solar system is the solar system.