it does in the milkyway galaxy, but not in the universe b/c the milkyway galaxy has an orbit
the sun goes everywhere not just stays in one place
the sun because it stays in one place and obits.
Not by a long shot. NOTHING stays in one place. What would that mean? There are no reference points that can reliably give us a stationary object anywhere in the universe. The earth and other planets orbit around the sun, but the sun makes a really big orbit around the galaxy that takes millions of years. The planets tag along.
One day, the day the sun stays out the longest or stays out the shortest!
The sun appears to move across the sky due to the Earth's rotation on its axis. In reality, the sun stays in one place at the center of our solar system, while the Earth rotates on its axis and orbits around the sun.
The sun stays in the same place, because we are rotating on an axis the sun appears to move. When its night time where you are the sun is shining on a different part of the earth.
Yes. The earth and the sun are mutually attracted by their gravitational fields. Which is why the earth stays in orbit round the sun
Yes, the Sun is a place in our Solar System.
sun
He discovered that planets move in ellipses not circles and that the sun stays in it's own place.
If you stay in one place on the moon, then the sun rises, stays up for about 2 Earth weeks, then sets, and stays down for about another 2 Earth weeks. That makes a complete "day" on the moon as long as 27.3 earth-days.
Yes, it is close to the Sun.