There path is not imaginary, so the answer is no.
Each planet moves in its own elliptical orbit round the Sun, then and now.
Their own gravity disables them to lose path in their orbit and makes their path steady.
Yes, each of the 8 major planets has its own orbit, with no asteroids or other objects in its path.
Since this is an imaginary friend, you can create your own imaginary foster home for the imaginary friend.
Its Orbit.Johannes Kepler (Germany), who lived between the time of Copernicus (Poland) and Isaac Newton (England), correctly postulated that all of the sun's planets indeed revolve about the sun in orbits which have the shape of an ellipse, with the sun at one focus of the ellipse. Isaac Newton, in his Principiae Mathematica, further stated, essentially, that any planet orbiting any star, or any moon orbiting any planet, would follow an elliptical path.
Each planet stays in it own orbit or path as it circles the sun. The orbits are very very very far apart. the planets never move out of their orbits so they never crash into each other. space probes that go from earth to Venus and Mars our closet neighbor planets have to travel for several months. space probes that go to the farther planets have to travel for years. :) Answer from my first book about space, a question and answer book.<3
The planets stay in their own orbit due to the gravitational pull from the sun. This gravitational force acts as a centripetal force, keeping the planets in orbit. The balance between the forward motion of the planet and the inward gravitational pull from the sun maintains the planet's orbital path.
No two planets in our solar system have overlapping orbits. Each planet follows its own distinct orbital path around the Sun. The paths are unique and do not intersect or overlap.
He discovered that planets move in ellipses not circles and that the sun stays in it's own place.
No, planets do not share the same orbit. Each planet in our solar system travels along its own distinct path around the Sun. The varying distances and speeds of planets in their orbits prevent them from sharing the same orbit.
As of now, the only planet known to have its own moon is Earth. Other planets in our solar system have moons but no planets of their own. In our solar system, moons primarily orbit around planets rather than planets orbiting around other planets.
no planets crust does not have light of their own but the core of the earth has light of its own