Moons do not orbit the Milky Way because they Milky Way is a galaxy. But if you are thinking about the amount of moons in the Milky Way total, it is around 1-2million. Probably even more.
Any planet you fancy. There is no "starting" point in our Galaxy.
The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy composed of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter. It contains billions of stars, including our sun, and is structured with a central bulge, a disk where the spiral arms are located, and a halo.
The Milky Way galaxy is not a planet; it is a vast collection of stars, gas, and dust. However, the gravitational pull of the Milky Way can influence the motion of planets within our solar system, including Earth, as well as other celestial bodies. Additionally, the Milky Way's spiral arms are regions where new stars are born, potentially shaping the evolution of planetary systems within them.
The Milky Way probably has billions of planets; only about a thousand are known so far.
Moons do not orbit the Milky Way because they Milky Way is a galaxy. But if you are thinking about the amount of moons in the Milky Way total, it is around 1-2million. Probably even more.
The sun
There is only one legit sun and that sun orbits the center of the milky way whereas the moons orbit their planet.
The Milky Way is not a planet. It is a galaxy.
The 'Milky Way' refers to a galaxy, not a planet.
the planet earth is in our Galaxy The milky way
no it doesn't have a moon .
There are about 100 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. We only know of moons in the solar system - 169 of them.
All of the 1000 or so planets discovered so far, or most of them, are inside the Milky Way.
The Milky Way is a Galaxy, not a planet
Eris is not a planet in the Milky Way galaxy; it is a dwarf planet located in the outer solar system. It is the most massive dwarf planet known to exist and is part of the Kuiper Belt, a region beyond Neptune that is home to many icy bodies.
No planets are similar but there is a moon. Titan, one of Jupiter's moons, is very similar to Earth.