This is a qualifying phrase that is asking you to decide whether each condition that follows it does or does not fit for objects that orbit the Sun.
planets.
That is called an orbit.
The sun does not have phases. It creates phases on objects between the earth and the sun. Objects beyond earth's orbit do not have phases.
The Sun's Gravity
space junk
universe
The Earth Orbits the sun
The sun
planets.
Through gravitational pull. The largest object will have smaller objects orbit it (objects close in size will orbit each other, but no planet is close to the size of the sun)
That is called an orbit.
gravity from the sun, and the mass of the objects
The answer is planets.
solar system
Objects above or below the Ecliptic and objects further out or with an orbit further from the Sun than Jupiter.
The planets,asteroids,and comets. There is nothing that doesn't orbit the sun.
Besides the 8 recognised planets in our solar system, there are also minor plants and dwarf planets. These still orbit our sun, but are not large enough to qualify as a planet. There are also comets - small bodies of rock and ice that are in a highly eccentric orbit around our sun, asteroids, which are smaller objects in orbit around the sun (mainly between orbits of Mars and Jupiter), Kuiper belt objects, which are out beyond the orbit of Neptune and Oort cloud objects, which is further out still. There are also moons and artificial satellites - not in a direct orbit around the sun, but in direct orbit with objects that are then rhemselves in direct orbit around the sun.