That situation has no regular pattern.
Because planets near the sun are more hotter
Mercury venus earth mars The inner solar system?
The planets never come anywhere near the sun. At least not during the period of several thousand human lifetimes.
Planets near the sun likely lost lighter elements like hydrogen and helium due to the sun's high temperature and solar wind. These elements were blown away, leaving behind the heavier elements that make up the terrestrial planets closer to the sun.
Most rings are made of ice. Therefore the planets that are father away from the sun are colder than the ones near the sun. Ice will form rings around the planets.
Gravity from the sun pulls the planets near it and away from it ad away foer it
The Sun is near the center of the Solar System. Basically, planets, etc. move around the center of mass of the Solar System, which is near the Sun - but not exactly so, because the planets (especially Jupiter) also have some mass.
Our Sun is mostly surrounded by space; but planets in the solar system do orbit the Sun (or more correctly, a common center of gravity near the Sun), so in a loose sense planets are around the Sun or move around it.
no because the atmosphere is what stores the heat
In order from the sun, the planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Of the 8 planets in our solar system, Mercury is the closest to the sun. It averages about 58 million kilometers from the sun on its' orbit.
planets get destroyed if they get near the sun or it can be destroyed when a lazer beam shoots it and then a black hole or zombies will take control of the planet