Yes. Earth is one of eight planets in our solar system, all of which are in an orbit around our central star which we call the sun.
All the planets in OUR solar system orbit around the sun(which is a star). Planets in other solar systems orbit around other stars.
All the planets in our solar system orbit our sun. Recently other suns, far out in Space, have been discovered to have their own planets.
Without the planets orbiting the sun all the planets would be cold and dark
All planets and other objects in the solar system orbit the Sun because of its gravity.
No. The planets orbit the sun.
All planets in our solar system orbit around the Sun.
Because it is nearer to the Sun than all of the other planets. Its orbit is inside that of all of the other planets, so it shorter.
All planets orbit the Sun.
No, not all planets orbit the sun. In our own solar system, all eight classical planets orbit the sun, but there are other planetary systems in the universe where planets may orbit different types of stars or even roam freely without a star.
In fact, Venus, Uranus, and the "dwarf planet" Pluto orbit the Sun in the same direction as all the other planets. So all the planets orbit in the same way.However they rotate in the opposite direction to the other planets.
All planets orbit around a sun.
YES!!! Together with their sattelites(moons). The nine planets that orbit the Sun from nearest to Sun to furthest are; - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Asteroid Belt , Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. With the exception of Mercury and Venus, which have no sattelites, all the other planets have sattelites, which partner their parent planet on there orbit around the Sun. All the planets orbits the Sun in approximately the same plane. However, there are comets and meteors which orbit the Sun in different planes, Notably Halley's Comet.