gravity
The Sun has no moons. Moons orbit Planets > Planets orbit the Sun.
Isaac Newton
Moons orbit planets Or rather moons and planets orbit their barycenter.
Moons orbit around planets. They are natural satellites that are held in orbit by the planet's gravitational pull.
Asteroids orbit the sun. Moons orbit planets and planets orbit the sun. So you could say the moons orbit the sun. However, moons are kept in their orbits by the gravity of their planet and planets are kept in orbit by the gravity of the sun. So in that sense, moons do not orbit the sun.
Moons are satellites. They orbit planets.
They are natural satellites of the sun. A satellite an object that orbits another object , for a example the moon would be a natural satellite to earth. That is why planets are satellites, they orbit the sun.
Planets, asteroids, meteors, comets, moons (which are also in orbit around their respective planets), dust particles, interplanetary gas.
Planets are bodies that orbit a central star (in our case, the Sun), and moons are smaller bodies that orbit planets.
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
The planets are satellites of the sun. The moons are satellites of the planets. The moons revolve around the planets captured by their gravity, while the planets revolve around the sun captured by its gravity and the sun.
Solid objects that can orbit planets are called moons. Moons are natural satellites that orbit around planets in a similar way that planets orbit around stars. Moons can range in size from small rocky bodies to larger worlds with their own atmospheres.