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Art [367]
3 years ago
11

How is a galaxy different from a solar system?

Geography
2 answers:
KATRIN_1 [288]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Well a galaxy is much much bigger we’re talking billion, trillion, or even quadrillion light years long “light years is the amount of years it takes for light to reach a point”.

A solar system probably has a couple of planets and 1 or maybe 2 stars where as a galaxy has billions and trillions of stars and planets.

Also a solar system is located inside a galaxy.

konstantin123 [22]3 years ago
5 0
The galaxy is massive and there is like Billions of solar system in the galaxy and we are all in the milky away
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Answer:

a

Explanation:

because if they're spending lots of money on the animals they must care about them

4 0
3 years ago
As a result of the health and social problems in Russia in the 1990s and 2000s, there has been _____.
Vilka [71]
Since you provide no options,

as a result of the health and social problems in Russia in 1990s and 2000s Russia reformed their public healthcare systems.

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3 years ago
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Which arrows indicate weathering and erosion?<br> sedimentary rocks
labwork [276]

Answer:

Melting is indicated by red arrows, cooling is indicated by blue arrows, and weathering and erosion is indicated by green arrows.

Explanation:

Hope this helps!

Please mark me as Brainlinieast.

7 0
3 years ago
What caused the u.s economic downturn in 2008?how did it affect the rest of the world
Tomtit [17]

The financial crisis, a severe contraction of liquidity in global financial markets, began in 2007 as a result of the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble. From 2001 successive decreases in the prime rate (the interest rate that banks charge their “prime,” or low-risk, customers) had enabled banks to issue mortgage loans at lower interest rates to millions of customers who normally would not have qualified for them, and the ensuing purchases greatly increased demand for new housing, pushing home prices ever higher. When interest rates finally began to climb in 2005, demand for housing, even among well-qualified borrowers, declined, causing home prices to fall. Partly because of the higher interest rates, most subprime borrowers, the great majority of whom held adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), could no longer afford their loan payments. Nor could they save themselves, as they formerly could, by borrowing against the increased value of their homes or by selling their homes at a profit. As the subprime mortgage market collapsed, many banks found themselves in serious trouble, because a significant portion of their assets had taken the form of subprime loans or bonds created from subprime loans together with less-risky forms of consumer debt. As millions of people lost their homes, jobs, and savings, the poverty rate in the United States increased, from 12.5 percent in 2007 to more than 15 percent in 2010. In the opinion of some experts, a greater increase in poverty was averted only by federal legislation, the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), which provided funds to create and preserve jobs and to extend or expand unemployment insurance and other safety net programs, including food stamps. Notwithstanding those measures, during 2007–10 poverty among both children and young adults (those aged 18–24) reached about 22 percent, representing increases of 4 percent and 4.7 percent, respectively. Much wealth was lost as U.S. stock prices—represented by the S&P 500 index—fell by 57 percent between 2007 and 2009 (by 2013 the S&P had recovered that loss, and it soon greatly exceeded its 2007 peak). Altogether, between late 2007 and early 2009, American households lost an estimated $16 trillion in net worth; one quarter of households lost at least 75 percent of their net worth, and more than half lost at least 25 percent. Households headed by younger adults, particularly by persons born in the 1980s, lost the most wealth, measured as a percentage of what had been accumulated by earlier generations in similar age groups. They also took the longest time to recover, and some of them still had not recovered even 10 years after the end of the recession. In 2010 the wealth of the median household headed by a person born in the 1980s was nearly 25 percent below what earlier generations of the same age group had accumulated; the shortfall increased to 41 percent in 2013 and remained at more than 34 percent as late as 2016. Those setbacks led some economists to speak of a “lost generation” of young persons who, because of the Great Recession, would remain poorer than earlier generations for the rest of their lives. As the financial crisis spread from the United States to other countries, particularly in western Europe (where several major banks had invested heavily in American MBSs), so too did the recession. Most industrialized countries experienced economic slowdowns of varying severity (notable exceptions were China, India, and Indonesia), and many responded with stimulus packages similar to the ARRA.

All taken from: https://www.britannica.com/topic/great-recession

7 0
3 years ago
Why does the Earth revolve around the sun?
lesya [120]

Newton realized that the reason the planets orbit the Sun is related to why objects fall to Earth when we drop them. The Sun's gravity pulls on the planets, just as Earth's gravity pulls down anything that is not held up by some other force and keeps you and me on the ground.

6 0
4 years ago
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