More than 1,100 open clusters have been discovered within the Milky Way Galaxy and many more are thought to exist.
Most planets that have been discovered are 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.
According to the Eclipse Aviation website, the most current number of stars that have been discovered by humans is around 100 billion stars just within the Milky Way Galaxy. There is also a catalog that compiles the images of over 84 million stars within the central parts of the Milky Way, which is currently the most detailed record of stars that have been officially confirmed as discovered.
No. Although the Milky Way is a relatively large galaxy it is nowhere near the largest known. Galaxies dozens of times the size and hundreds of times the mass of the Milky Way have been observed.
because scientists have discovered it in recent years One problem nobody has ever been out of the milky way!
Nobody has been outside the Milky Way.
There are 8 planets in our own SOLAR SYSTEM, including Jupiter; according to current research, it seems that most of the stars in our Milky Way have their own planets. That means there are probably over a billion stars in our Milky Way; most of these stars have not been discovered yet.
milky way is a galaxy which consists of countless numbers of stars,asteriods,meteors,dust ,rocks ,etc ,.the solar system refers to our system which includes the sun and the nine planets. There are currently 278 stars in the milky way galaxy around which planets have been discovered.
The solar system is in the milky way
Yes. So far hundreds have been detected, and the number is increasing daily.
No animals have been discovered at the exact South Pole as it has only been visited a few times. There are a number of insects and a few varieties of penguins that have been discovered elsewhere on Antarctica (closer to the water's edge).
It's not a "remnant" of a black hole; there is a black hole at the center of the Milky Way, period. And as far as I know it wasn't discovered by any single telescope; rather, it has been observed over several years, with different instruments, and scientists have come to the conclusion (based on such observations) that the only explanation for what they observed is a black hole.