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".
No. Stars are their own class of of objects. In simple terms planets orbit stars and moons orbit planets.
Planets do not technically need their respective stars, but stars keep planets in orbit and provide heat and light to the planets.
none Stars do not orbit planets.
1) Although planets can be composed primarily of rock or gas, only stars are objects made of gas that are massive enough to support a nuclear fusion reaction. 2) Although planets and stars can orbit stars (as in binary systems), stars never orbit planets.
Gravity keeps the planets in orbit around the sun and the stars and the stars in orbit around the center of the galaxy. Gravity also holds the stars together against their own internal pressure.
Planets orbit stars.
Planets orbit the sun. Stars do not.
well for starters, stars don't orbit planets. Planets orbit stars, but some stars don't have planets that orbit them.
No. Dwarf planets orbit stars just like planets do. Stars orbit the center of their galaxy. An object orbiting a planet would be a moon.
No. Stars are their own class of of objects. In simple terms planets orbit stars and moons orbit planets.
No. Stars are like suns, around which planets may orbit.
Because stars have a greater amount of gravity
Planets orbit stars, stars orbit a galaxy. Planets are not "on" anything. A lot of stars out there have planets - we are just finding out how many now that we have better techniques to find them. So probably all galaxies have at least some stars with planets.
Planets do not technically need their respective stars, but stars keep planets in orbit and provide heat and light to the planets.
Planets orbit stars, moons orbit planets. That is the only difference.
Moons orbit planets. Planets (and dwarf planets) orbit stars.
none Stars do not orbit planets.