the object is constantly pulled towards the force of gravity (caused by a planet or a sun) but is travelling so fast that it never falls into the planet. thais is quite difficult to explain without a diagram. look up planetary orbits on Google images
It would be called a revolution.
An orbit. In fact, orbits are not usually exactly circular. They are "elliptical".
An artificial satellite.
If the revolving continues for more than a few revolutions, then its path is an elliptical orbit. In space, orbiting cannot take place in a circular path, and the balance point between flying off into space, crashing into the bigger object, or staying in orbit only occurs in an ellipse. It doesn't have to be much of an ellipse, either.
the Orbit of the moon.
orbit
I just found it , its called revolution
The motion is typically called the orbit.
Well it is orbiting and it is caused by gravity, centripetal and centrifugal forces
one complete circular movement made by one object around another object
A planet in an orbit greater than any of the others.An object in orbit around a single planet is a moon or satellite of that planet.
It would be called a revolution.
No. An object of just about any size can orbit at any distance.
An orbit. In fact, orbits are not usually exactly circular. They are "elliptical".
nothing unless then your in space then its an orbit
This is an orbit.
Any object with greater mass than another can cause the lesser object to orbit it. Most of our comets come from the Oort Cloud, beyond Pluto, and they orbit our Sun.