Most planets that have been discovered are in the Milky Way
The planets were formed in the Milky Way. Our Galaxy (Milky Way) is older than the planets of our solar system.
All of the 1000 or so planets discovered so far, or most of them, are inside the Milky Way.
The Milky Way probably has billions of planets; only about a thousand are known so far.
As far as we humans know the milky way will not come to an end, although the planets in the milky way will the milky way itself will never come to an end
If all planets are evenly spaced and there are 2,500 planets, they would be about 40 light years apart in the Milky Way.
Yes. There have been hundreds of planets discovered in other stars in the Milky Way. It has been estimated that the Milky Way likely contains hundreds of billions of planets.
Our whole solar system, all the planets and everything, are part of the Milky Way galaxy. So, asking how far doesn't really make sense, because Neptune is in the Milky Way.
No. There are dwarf planets in our own solar system that are smaller than Pluto and there are many undiscovered planets in the Milky Way that would be smaller than it, but are too far away to see.
There are more than 350 known planets in the milky way, with only 8 in our solar system.
All the planets we know of... even those orbiting other stars... are in the Milky Way Galaxy.
The milky way is a GALAXY where the earth and the other 10/11 planets are in.
All of the planets in our solar system are in the Milky Way.