As far as I know, no planets have yet been detected around Canopus. You may be aware that Frank Herbert placed his fictional desert planet Arrakis as the third planet of the star, however.
There are several bright stars. Planets move around the Ecliptic, covering 13 constellations or so. Note that planets look like stars, but are not currently considered stars. Also note that some of the planets look brighter (to us) than any real star. Other than planets, the brightest stars are the Sun (also changes through the constellations of the Ecliptic), Sirius (Canis Major), Canopus (Carina), and Toliman (Centaurus).
A sun (lower case) is defined as any "star" with planets or other objects revolving around it. As we have found over 400 exoplanets, the answer is yes, you can see other suns in the night sky.
No the sun doesn't have any phases because its not revolving around anything.
Mars does not revolve around any planets, it is a planet in its own right. If it did, it would be called a moon. It orbits the sun directly.
Planets are not satellites. The definition of satellite is any celestial body orbiting around a planet or star.
There are several bright stars. Planets move around the Ecliptic, covering 13 constellations or so. Note that planets look like stars, but are not currently considered stars. Also note that some of the planets look brighter (to us) than any real star. Other than planets, the brightest stars are the Sun (also changes through the constellations of the Ecliptic), Sirius (Canis Major), Canopus (Carina), and Toliman (Centaurus).
A sun (lower case) is defined as any "star" with planets or other objects revolving around it. As we have found over 400 exoplanets, the answer is yes, you can see other suns in the night sky.
No the sun doesn't have any phases because its not revolving around anything.
A solar system is a collection of objects that orbit a star or group of stars. In most solar systems, a central star (or stars, like a binary pair for instance) provides the mass to keep the system in place, and also the light and heat for the smaller planets, moons, asteroids, and comets that are orbiting. The Sun together with the group of celestial bodies that are held by its attraction and revolve around it, or a group of celestial bodies revolving around any star.The solar system is our planets, revolving around a solar power (sun). We kind of depend on each other.The sun and everything that orbits it ( asteriods , planets , comets , etc. )It is the biggest system which comprises of planets revolving and rotating in their orbit, where sun is at the center n other planets like Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars etc, rotates around sun in an elliptical orbit. Till date there is only one solar system known n seen, but it is estimated that there would be many such solar system in whole universe.!!
The sun, along with the rest of the solar system, revolves around the centre of our galaxy.
In any solar system; that's what planets do.
It is expanding, and at an ever increasing rate according to current understanding. Whether or not it is revolving is problematic, since there is no background object against which any revolution can be observed.
As we have yet to determine the characteristics of every planet in the Universe, or even small details like inclination, the answer is, at the moment, no. However, given the amount of possible planets in the Universe - upwards of 10 sextillion, the chances are VERY high. Guess it would depend on what degree of accuracy you require.
I am not familiar with planets evolving around any singular planet. If you are referring to orbit, the planets orbit the sun, a star, not a planet, in our solar system. Some planets have moons in their orbit.
No, Uranus does not orbit around any plants. Uranus doesorbit around the sun.
No, it only orbits around the sun.
no, all the planets revolve AROUND the sun.