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The order of the outer planets, from closet to the sun to furthest away from the sun, is Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, then Neptune.
A lot?
Moons revolve around planets, not the Sun. Planets revolve around the Sun.
Yes, easily, because the Sun is much bigger than all the planets combined. The Sun could also swallow up all of the dwarf planets as well.
uranus
The closeness to the Sun is not directly related to the mass.
Jupiter is the fifth planet in order from the sun. Jupiter is a gas giant, with 11 times the diameter of Earth, and two and a half times the mass of all the other planets and satellites combined!
planets from the sun in order: mercury, venus, earth, mars, jupiter, saturn, uranis, and neptune.
Usually, the core of a planet will be either molten or solid rock, or plasma of some sort. Depends on the planet and it's closeness to it's sun.
the main planets in order of closeness to the sun are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Pluto is now known as a dwarf planet as it is too small to class as a planet.
in order from the sun out, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars
The order of the planets beginning with the one closest to the sun is: Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune
The order of the outer planets, from closet to the sun to furthest away from the sun, is Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, then Neptune.
The order of the planets, from the Earth to the Sun, are: Venus, then Mercury.
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus and Neptune, in that order from the Sun.
Not all the planets orbit the sun - other stars have planets too. But all the planets in our solar system, which is the system of our sun, revolve around the sun; otherwise they would be in other solar systems. All the planets we can see with our naked eye orbit the sun, since the planets orbiting the sun are the only ones close enough to earth to see without a telescope.
Without the planets orbiting the sun all the planets would be cold and dark