The Sun, in our solar system.
Don't let me confuse you, but I have a slightly better answer.
Technically the planets AND the Sun all orbit about the centre
of mass of the system. This is just outside the surface of the Sun.
So Copernicus and Galileo were wrong!
OK I'm just being pedantic. "The Sun" is basically the correct answer.
Your question is not very clear, but I believe that you mean what do the planets of our solar system rotate around. In that case, the answer is the Sun.
Planets in the solar system orbit the sun :)
Moons and satellites
Kepler's 1st law states that the orbits of the planets around the sun and makes an ellipse. This is taught in astronomy.
around the sun, not the earth.
because of the gravity the sun has and also the planets have gravity turning around the sun
They are orbits and they are elliptical in shape. So the answer could be "orbits" or it could be "ellipses".
Nicolas Copernicus.
The planets orbits are the routes or paths that the planets follow around our sun. One orbit is one trip around the sun (one year).
Elliptical orbits of the planets around the sun actually match what we observe. Newton's Theory of Universal Gravitation states that planets will move around the sun in elliptical orbits.
moons
it orbits around it
the orbits
elliptical
orbits
Orbits of the planets around the sun
They have their own orbits, around the star they formed around, just like how our planet orbits our sun.
Kepler's 1st law states that the orbits of the planets around the sun and makes an ellipse. This is taught in astronomy.
elliptical
Orrery