No, and none of them ever will. The Voyager 1 probe has just barely made it into interstellar space, but that is nowhere near leaving the galaxy.
we send satellites out into space and take pictures with cameras on the satellites
Nothing from earth has left the milky way yet
We are already in the Milky Way. No satellite has ever left it.
A lot of them. The actual number is currently unknown. All of them are in the solar system, which is inside of the Milky Way,orbiting the Earth. We have really not explored the Milky Way galaxy in sufficient detail to be able to give any confident answer to that question. If you wanted to know how many artificial satellites there are in orbit around the planet Earth, that question can be answered. Whether there are other planets in the galaxy which also have artificial satellites, we really cannot say.
They don't find any galaxies. They stay in the Milky Way. If they left the Milky Way, Madeleine L'Engle doesn't say it in the book!
There no milky way in sky there is only milky way galaxy
The Milky Way galaxy is.... called the Milky Way Galaxy
We cannot see the entire Milky Way galaxy, since we're IN it; it is all around us. We're actually way off toward the edge of the galaxy. The center of the galaxy is in the general direction of the constellation Scorpio; when you see the Milky Way at night, there's really no mistaking it. But many barred spiral galaxies have a structure similar to what we believe the Milky Way has; we can base our simulations of our own galaxy by looking at Andromeda or other beautiful spiral galaxies. As far as satellites, our most distant satellites are the two Voyager probes, which are just now approaching the edge of our own solar system. And if we DID have satellites so far away that they could see the entire Milky Way galaxy, the radio signal would take longer than the span of existence of the human race to get here. Also, the center of the Milky Way is so dense with stars, gases and dust that it actually obscures a great deal of the space behind it. We don't really have any kind of clear view of that part of our galaxy or the vast regions of space beyond it.
The galaxy that contains Earth and the rest of the Solar system is the Milky Way galaxy.
Zero. We are in it
the milky way is just the name of our galaxy, there isn't really a "milky way"
As of now, Saturn holds the record for the most moons in the Milky Way, with over 80 confirmed natural satellites. This surpasses Jupiter, which has 79 moons. The counts of moons for both planets can change with new discoveries, but Saturn currently leads in the tally.