The Sun is the central object in the Solar System; it is orbited by planets, asteroids, meteors, dust particles, and comets.
The Sun is the central object in the Solar System; it is orbited by planets, asteroids, meteors, dust particles, and comets.
The Sun is the central object in the Solar System; it is orbited by planets, asteroids, meteors, dust particles, and comets.
The Sun is the central object in the Solar System; it is orbited by planets, asteroids, meteors, dust particles, and comets.
Yes
A comet.
Yes. Halley's Comet is a comet that orbits our sun, and the definition of "Part of the solar system" is 'Any object that orbits our sun.'
The planets and other objects in the solar system stay in their orbits due to the mutual gravitational attraction between each orbiting object and the Sun.
Kepler discovered the orbits of the solar system are elliptical.
The sun, Sol. (The sun, or central star of a system, is usually the most massive object in a solar system.)
Because it has almost all of the mass in the solar system, and that's how gravity works in such a situation.
The moon that orbits farthest from its planet is Calisto. Calisto is also the most heavily cratered object in the entire solar system.
The property that determines whether an object is part of the solar system is if it orbits the Sun. Objects within the solar system, like planets, moons, asteroids, and comets, orbit around the Sun due to its gravitational pull. Any object that does not orbit the Sun, such as stars in other solar systems or interstellar objects, would be considered outside the solar system.
Yes, everything that orbits our sun, including everything that orbits everything that orbits our sun, is part of the solar system.
No. Pluto orbits in our solar system.
A moon orbits a planet.