The planets orbit around the sun.
Earth for a start.
· Saturn
Two of them in this solar system; Mercury and Venus. Now that a few dozen exoplanets (planets that orbit other stars) have been identified, we're going to have to start being specific about which solar system we mean. Right now, we know next-to-nothing about those exoplanets; only that they exist.
the sun is where the temperature is high enough
It didn't. The universe formed with the Big Bang about 13.7 billion years ago. Our solar system didn't form until about 4.6 billion years ago.
Earth for a start.
Right now there is I believe only one planet that begins with the letter J that is "Jupiter". In Earth's Solar System which is the largest planet in our solar system.
Kuiper belt is a solar system word. It is the region beyond all the planets.
solar system
X-ray star, and X-ray astronomy :)
Trivia would be that 2 start with M, one starts with V, the others start with E, J, S, U and V.
The names of moons Titan, Tethys, Titania start with "t".
The solar system was previously a cloud of interstellar gas.
Yes, When asteroids join and start building up. No, that's not scientifically realistic. What I mean is that astronomers calculate that it will not happen at this stage of the Solar System's evolution. It's all based on mathematics, I think.
To start, hopefully my solar system is the same as yours. There is no definite answer depending on how perfectly aligned you are asking. There was an alignment of sorts with 5 planets and the moon May 5th, 2000. The next one of those will happen in 2040. Including all the planets and a near perfect to perfect alignment, it's in the millions of years to trillions of years. For better information check out below:
· Saturn
The sun is a hot start that helps all the 9 planets get some warmth. The sun is pretty much the whole control of this solar system with 99.86% control.