Yes, it does.
the suns gravity keeps the planets in orbit
the gravititonal pull does; it is what keeps all the planet in the suns orbit xx
however in the hell that it does itIt keeps us in orbit of the sun.
Yeah
The planets are kept in orbit by the Suns gravity.
The suns huge gravitational force keeps the planets in an orbit around it.
gravity and inertia combine to keep earth in orbit because the suns gravity keeps the earth in orbit and the inertia keeps the earth from going in a straight line.
Planets are kept in elliptical orbits due to the gravitational force acting between the planet and the sun. This force causes the planet to move in a curved path, resulting in an elliptical orbit. The balance between the planet's inertia and the gravitational force determines the shape of the orbit.
Gravity, combined with the velocities of the planets, keeps the planets in orbit around the Sun.Gravity between any body, such as a planet, and the Sun is one factor. Also the planet has a velocity. These two things combine to keep the planet in orbit around the Sun.Gravitation. The suns gravitational pull. The huge mass of the sun means it has a huge gravitational pull, keeping all of the planets in place. There is also the planets velocity that would take the planet away from the sun if there was no gravity, so these two forces act against each other.
No. Kepler proposed that some force kept the planets in orbit, but did not know or say what that force was. It was Isaac Newton who figured out that this force is gravity.
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
It was Nicholas Copernicus. who discovered that the sun keeps the planets one Their orbit.