it pulls them all together
Our solar system consists of the sun, the planets, their moons, and a variety of smaller objects. The sun is at the center of the solar system, with other orbiting around it. The force of gravity holds the solar system together.
because of GRAVITY
Gravity causes objects, like planets, to orbit the Sun.
A star is all that's required. A solar system is made of at least one star, and the star has to be big enough to have gravity strong enough to bring other objects such as gas and rock and ice into it's orbit.
Gravity tends to pull them together.
easy gravity :)
Our solar system consists of the sun, the planets, their moons, and a variety of smaller objects. The sun is at the center of the solar system, with other orbiting around it. The force of gravity holds the solar system together.
Our solar system consists of the sun, the planets, their moons, and a variety of smaller objects. The sun is at the center of the solar system, with other orbiting around it. The force of gravity holds the solar system together.
Gravity is the force which keeps them there.
gravity
because of GRAVITY
Gravity!
Because the sun has more mass than anything else in our solar system. Gravity is a function of mass.
The Sun's Gravity
The different parts of the Solar System attract one another through gravity. Since the Sun has most of the mass of the Solar System, other objects are mainly attracted to the Sun.
All planets and other objects in the solar system orbit the Sun because of its gravity.
no. gravity acting on an object depends on the mass of each of the nearby objects. The solar system is not uniform in mass, so gravity is not uniform either.