No, the sun both spins, and moves with the rotation of the Milky Way. Additionally, it move through space with the galaxy.
Yes. Stars move themselves independently in space. Our own sun in fact is also moving through our Milky Way Galaxy.
No. There is empty space between the sun and earth, but radiant heat gets through that empty region.
momentum
Radiation if that's the answer you're looking for... Radiation is the transfer of heat by electromagnetic waves (or light energy) traveling through space (but not outer space, just space like in the air).
No, the sun both spins, and moves with the rotation of the Milky Way. Additionally, it move through space with the galaxy.
Through radiation. Such as we receive heat from the sun through radiation when it's vacuum in space.
I believe it maintains an orbital pattern, though remains in the middle of our system.
Not sure how much the sun moves through space - about the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy. The earth rotates through 0.25 degrees in a minute so the sun APPEARS to move 0.25 degrees.
It doesn't. Light comes to us from the Sun, and from distant stars and galaxies, through what is basically empty space.
Actually three ways: on its axis, around the sun, and through space.
sun moon
space is a vacuum, and sound can't move through a vacuum.
No. Light comes to us from the Sun, as well as from distant stars and galaxies, and moves basically through empty space.
Radiations from the sun are able to travel through space because of the heat waves.
The sun doesn't move through the sky. The Earth is held by the Sun's gravitational pull and orbits the Sun while spinning.This is why it looks like the Sun is moving through the sky.
slow down and refract