Yes it does.
Yes, It has a strong gravitational pull. Without the gravitational pull, none of the planets would orbit it.
The sun's so large that its gravitational pull is very strong, but just strong enough to hold the planets in place. So the relationship is its gravitational pull.
In our solar system it would be the sun. But there are much more massive objects beyond our solar sytem that would have a higher pull - the more massive an object is the higher its gravitational pull. a black hole has a huge gravitational pull, so strong that light cannot escape.
The sun will not suck us in because its we are to far away and its gravitational pull is not strong enough.
The sun's gravitational pull keeps the earth in orbit around it.
Heavenly bodies revolve around the sun because of the gravitational pull that the sun exerts on them. This gravitational force keeps the planets and other objects in orbit around the sun, following a path determined by the balance between the object's inertia and the gravitational pull of the sun.
Yes, everything in the cosmos has a gravitational pull on everything else.
Its pull on the earth would be 25% as strong.
The regular rising and falling of ocean water due to the gravitational pull of the Sun and Moon is called
The regular rising and falling of ocean water due to the gravitational pull of the Sun and Moon is called
Planets orbit the Sun due to the gravitational pull between them. This gravitational force keeps the planets in their elliptical paths around the Sun. It is a balance between the planets' inertia wanting to move forward and the Sun's gravitational force pulling them inward.
Neither the sun nor the moon are planets. The sun has the strongest gravitational pull of any object in the solar system.