NO!!
NO!!
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.
None. Stars do not orbit the moon. They are murch farther away and much larger than the moon is.
Although shooting stars are not affected by the Earth's gravity, they are still pulled by other planets and stars. All of the shooting stars visible on Earth orbit the sun, just like the earth itself.
No, Earth is specifically bound to its orbit around the Sun due to the gravitational pull between the two. The distances to other stars like Pollux, Aldebaran, Arcturus, and Betelgeuse are far too vast for Earth to establish an orbit around them. Earth's orbit is stable around the Sun within our own solar system.
Moons orbit planets. Planets orbit stars. Some stars orbit other stars, or orbit their mutual center of gravity. Stars orbit the center of the galaxy. Galaxies may orbit the center of the "galactic group".