There are millions, possibly billions, of planets in the Milky Way. An exact number will never be known.
Pluto is still in the Milky Way Galaxy.
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.
If you visit the NASA website or even search for the "Milky Way", you can get a list of planets in our solar system. There are only 9 planets, 8 if you don't count dwarf planet Pluto.
milky way
Yes. Venus is one of the planets in our solar system, and our Sun (and the solar system) are part of the Milky Way galaxy.
It is not known. Scientists are still not sure how many dwarf planets are in the solar system or how many true planets are in the galaxy. If estimates from our solar system apply elsewhere, however, the number is probably in the trillions.
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.
No one knows. Astronomers are scanning the visible stars of our own Milky Way galaxy for planets orbiting faraway stars, but such planets would have to be nearly the size of Jupiter to be detected at such distances
The planets were formed in the Milky Way. Our Galaxy (Milky Way) is older than the planets of our solar system.
pluto,asteroids,stars,comets and dwarf planets Stars, gas, black holes.
There are more than 350 known planets in the milky way, with only 8 in our solar system.
Most planets that have been discovered are in the Milky Way
The entire solar system is in the milky way, with all the stars you can see.
Pluto is still in the Milky Way Galaxy.
It isn't even clear how many dwarf planets our own Solar System has (it may be some tens of them, hundreds, or even thousands) - much less how many there are in the entire Milky Way or in other galaxies.
The Milky Way has somewhere between 100 and 400 billion stars; most of those are red dwarf stars.
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.