NO!!
NO!!
They orbit as stars would in any other halo. It is gravity that causes everything to orbit and "spin around" Stars can also orbit around other stars called a binary orbit.
The Moon orbits the Earth.
No stars orbit the Sun. The Sun is a star itself, and it is at the center of our solar system, with planets such as Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars orbiting around it.
Stars appear to change position in the night sky due to Earth's rotation. As the Earth moves, different stars come into view while others become hidden below the horizon. This apparent motion is also influenced by the Earth's orbit around the Sun, causing the stars to shift gradually over time.
Yes, planets orbit stars. That's what our earth is doing right now.
Earth and Mars are planets, not stars. Stars are massive celestial bodies that generate light and heat through nuclear reactions in their cores, while planets are smaller bodies that orbit stars. Earth and Mars are both planets in our solar system that orbit the Sun.
around Earth!
Planets orbit stars.
A real-world example of an ellipse is the orbit of any object around another, when it is bound by gravitation - the Earth around the Sun, the Moon around the Earth, two stars in a double-star system (around their center of mass), etc.A real-world example of an ellipse is the orbit of any object around another, when it is bound by gravitation - the Earth around the Sun, the Moon around the Earth, two stars in a double-star system (around their center of mass), etc.A real-world example of an ellipse is the orbit of any object around another, when it is bound by gravitation - the Earth around the Sun, the Moon around the Earth, two stars in a double-star system (around their center of mass), etc.A real-world example of an ellipse is the orbit of any object around another, when it is bound by gravitation - the Earth around the Sun, the Moon around the Earth, two stars in a double-star system (around their center of mass), etc.
Yes. One moon orbit Earth (The moon)
None. Stars do not orbit the moon. They are murch farther away and much larger than the moon is.