Planets follow an eclipse shape when orbiting around the sun. Pluto had an irregular orbit and is no refereed to as a moon.
Johannes Kepler discovered that the path that planets follow around the sun is an elliptical shape. This is known as Kepler's First Law of Planetary Motion.
The planets in our solar system generally follow an elliptical orbit around the Sun, although these orbits can vary slightly in shape depending on the planet's distance and speed. The orbits are governed by the gravitational pull of the Sun, which keeps the planets in their paths.
The motions of the Sun and the planets reflect to disk shape of the solar nebula because they follow the same rotation as this disk shape. The rotation of the Sun and the planets is not a perfect circle.
Planets are all spherical.
all planets have a circular shape
There are two planets with an almost perfectly spherical shape. They are Mercury and Venus.
Planets move around the sun in elliptical orbits. These orbits are elongated and follow Kepler's laws of planetary motion, which describe the shape and dynamics of the planetary orbits.
The inner planets have a spherical shape. In fact all planets are more or less spherical.
Spherical
ellipitcal
Meteoroids follow the normal rules for orbits: Kepler's laws of planetary motion, just like the planets. Thus the basic shape is an ellipse.
They are a round shape.