Gravity holds the planets in their orbit
The planets are held in their orbits because of the gravitational pull of the sun. They are also affected by the other planets and other celestial bodies in the solar system.
There is gravity in space. Gravity is what makes orbits possible.
No. It holds for other planets, and for any other situation where one objects orbits another - for example, moons orbiting planets, stars orbiting a black hole, etc.
The two planets with overlapping orbits are Neptune and Pluto. These are the only two planets that have overlapping orbits.
All the planets have orbits so four cannot be picked out.
It was Kepler who discovered that the planets orbits are elliptical.
The sun's gravity holds the planets in their orbits. It also holds other space objects in their orbits, such as asteroids.
Gravity from the Sun holds the planets in their orbits.
The gravitational attraction from our Sun holds the planets in orbit.
The gravity that keeps the planets in orbit is the sun's gravity, which is a product of the sun's mass.
There is gravity in space. Gravity is what makes orbits possible.
No. It holds for other planets, and for any other situation where one objects orbits another - for example, moons orbiting planets, stars orbiting a black hole, etc.
gravity. the mass of the sun is so large that it is able to pull in all the planets and what not
The planets revolve in elliptical orbits. The inner planets have orbits 230 million km or less from the Sun. The outer planets have orbits 775 million km or greater.
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).
The two planets with overlapping orbits are Neptune and Pluto. These are the only two planets that have overlapping orbits.
Different planets have different orbit lengths because of their distance from the sun. Planets closer to the sun have shorter orbits, and planets farther away have longer orbits.
All the planets have orbits so four cannot be picked out.