Address bc1q79lvela5ewhwyytye0rqqzeg47x02qlgkdz2x4
The address you referenced has received and then sent onward multiple very similar amounts in the week since the theft. I don’t know what this pattern means but it seems inconsistent with the work of an opportunistic thief randomly hacking into wallets.
There is no simple way to find if that address belongs to an exchange or to a normal wallet. Even if you identified an exchange, the exchange is required by law in many countries to protect the personally identifying data of its customers. You would probably need the support of lawyers and police in the country the exchange is operating from. You would probably need good evidence to support your version of events.
Recovery
You should report theft to police but your chances of recovery must be near zero.
It is possible the address belongs to a slave in a fraud factory or someone pennyless and gullible who has been duped by a recruitment scam into becoming an unwitting or unwilling money launderer and in the intervening week the money has been washed through multiple cryptocurrencies and multiple exchanges and multiple mixers.
Recovery Fraud
You will be contacted by a large number of people recommending or claiming to be bitcoin recovery specialists. All or almost all will be confidence tricksters. Never pay an advance fee to receive recovered money.