I believe you are asking about their orbits around the Sun. The orbit is the (elliptical) path they take around the Sun. It takes a certain amount of time to complete, which is the planet's "year".
One calendar year on Earth is (more or less) the time for one full revolution of Earth around the Sun.
It is the planets' orbit.
That would be an elliptical orbit.
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The path the Sun follows through the constellations is the "Ecliptic". It's really the plane of Earth's orbit around the Sun. The planets in our Solar System basically move close to this same plane. At most, they can go a few degrees from the Ecliptic.
Yes.
The path a planet takes is called an orbit.The planets are kept in orbit by the gravitational pull of the star (in our case the Sun) they orbit.
Their "orbits".
We call that path the "orbit" of the orbiting body. Note: You would not ever see a planet orbiting another planet. At least, if you did, you would not call them both planets.
It is the planets' orbit.
eliptical orbit.
The path the planets take around the sun, is called a orbit.
The electrical path is termed an electrical circuit.
if you mean the imaginary line that the planets travel on it's called an 'Orbit' or 'obital path'
The path on which planets travel is called their orbit.
The path is called the orbit. There are 8 planets (excluding Pluto and the other dwarf planets) with separate paths at various unique distances from the Sun.The planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune (in order of increasing distance from the Sun).The path that a planet takes while traveling around the sun is called its orbit. Mercury has the fastest orbit, at 88 days. Neptune has the longest orbit, at 165 years.
The gravity of there star keeps them on path and a planets moon is sun around by its planets gravitational force
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