Hello!
Kepler's first law states that an orbit of a planet around the Sun is an ellipse with the Sun being at one focus of it. Our problem is close enough: the Milky Way Galaxy may be considered as a sun (large central body), and the Sun may be considered as a planet orbiting it. I assume this ellipse is almost a circle, because in the opposite case the speed of the Sun would be different at the different points of its trajectory.
Denote the radius of this orbit as R, it is given, and the speed as V, it is unknown. Also denote the given mass of the Milky Way Galaxy as M and the Sun's mass as m, it is about 2*10^(30) kg. Then the Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation tells us that the gravity force F is G*(M*m)/R^2, so by Newton's second law the acceleration is F/m = (GM)/R^2.
We also know that the acceleration of a body in uniform circle motion is V^2/R, so (GM)/R^2 = V^2/R, or V^2 = (GM)/R, or V = sqrt((GM)/R) = sqrt((G*10^11*m)/R).
Numerically it is about
sqrt((6.7*10^(-11)*10^11*2*10^30)/(2.45*10^20)) = sqrt(5.5*10^10) approx 2.3*10^5 (m/s),
or about 230 km/s.
The time needed is about (2piR)/V approx 6.7*10^15 (s) approx 212,000,000 years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galactic_year
https://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/circles/Lesson-3/Newton-s-Law-of-Universal-Gravitation
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