pluto
All planets in our solar system have elliptical orbits.
no
The shape and spatial orientation of the p orbitals in an atom can be remembered by calling it the peanut orbital. The shape of a p orbital is peanut shaped and can be oriented on the x, y, or z axes.
the shape of earth's orbit around the sun
its the shape of an orbital
All planets in our solar system have elliptical orbits.
Jupiter's orbit is an ellipse with an eccentricity of 0.048, which means that it looks like a circle with the Sun off-centre by an amount equal to 0.048 times the average radius. Uranus has an eccentricity of 0.047 and that is the closest among the other planets.
no
in term of shape
orbital shape
The Sun does not orbit the planets. The planets orbit the Sun. The Sun is stationary with relation to the planets' motion. The Sun does, however, orbit the Milky Way galaxy, as do the planets and everything else in the galaxy.
The shape of a p orbital is like a dumbbell-shaped. P orbital shapes depends on the quantum numbers affiliated with an energy state.
Jupiter is a large, circular, multicolored planet.Ans 2.The shape of Jupiter is an oblate spheroid.
Planets orbit the sun in the shape of an ellipse, which is an elongated circle similar to an oval. When it was first discovered that the Sun is the center of the solar system, it was thought that all the planets had a circular orbit, but the calculations didn't fit.
dumb bell shape
sp3 orbitals are similar in shape to p orbitals however one side is much larger than the other - hence you have a lopsided dunbell shape orbital
spherical