Yes, When asteroids join and start building up.
No, that's not scientifically realistic. What I mean is that astronomers calculate
that it will not happen at this stage of the Solar System's evolution. It's all
based on mathematics, I think.
Almost everything in the solar system at this time. Planets, Moons.
Planets and their moons are part of a larger system called a planetary system. Planets are celestial bodies that orbit a star (like our Sun), while moons are natural satellites that orbit planets. Together, they form a celestial relationship where the planet exerts gravitational influence on its moons to keep them in orbit.
Our solar system consists of:The SunThe 8 planetsThe 5 dwarf planetsThe moons that orbit the planets and dwarf planetsThe more than 700,000 smaller objects, known as minor planets, asteroids, and comets
Most of the gasses were swept out of the inner solar system by the solar wind, leaving rock as the most abundant material to form planets and moons.
The outer planets are much bigger and so have more gravity that can attract more moons. Also in the outer solar system there is more rocks and boulders around that can come together to form moons.
Moons are thought to form from the same material as planets through a process called accretion, where smaller objects like asteroids or planetesimals are pulled together by the planet's gravity. In some cases, moons may also be captured by a planet's gravity from passing objects in the solar system.
The Sun and its eight1 planets, along with all of their moons, the asteriods, comets, dwarf planets, and minor debris, form the Solar System.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1In 2006, the International Astronomical Union changed the definition of a planet, resulting in the redefinition of Pluto as a dwarf planet, and no longer one of the nine planets. As a result, the Solar System has eight planets.
The Solar System is a oval because that how the planets form it .
A solar system!
A star and all the objects that orbit it are part of a solar system. The star is typically at the center of the system, and objects such as planets, moons, asteroids, and comets orbit around it due to its gravitational pull. These objects together form a dynamic and interconnected system.
The planets that make part of the solar system move around the Sun. The huge gravity power of the Sun maintain all planets and moons orbiting around it on an elliptical form.
Because the sun (Sol) has them all trapped in its gravitational field. All the planets revolve around the sun and so all the planet's satellites revolve around the sun, too. There are quite a few more objects that are part of Sol's gravitational field- comets, asteroids etc.