The sun, followed by Jupiter.
Most of the mass of the solar system is in the sun. As a consequence all objects in the solar system orbit the sun.
Everything with mass ... i.e. ALL the objects of the solar system.
the sun which takes up 98% of the solar system mass
Roughly in order of decreasing size and mass, the objects in the Solar System are: the Sun; the planets; moons; dwarf planets; other planetoids; comets.
The Sun is the largest object in our solar system, comprising about 99.8% of its total mass. By comparison, all the other objects in our solar system, including planets, moons, asteroids, and comets, make up only about 0.2% of the solar system's mass.
Well the Sun has the most mass in the entire solar system, so it would naturally be found in the center, with objects of lesser mass orbiting it.
No. The sun is part of the solar system, so it cannot be bigger than it. The mass of the sun is much larger than the mass of the rest of the objects in the solar system put together, which may be what you are referring to.
no. gravity acting on an object depends on the mass of each of the nearby objects. The solar system is not uniform in mass, so gravity is not uniform either.
A solar orbit is the path a body takes around the sun.All objects in the solar system have a certain path they follow due to the mass they have, the mass of the sun and their distance from the sun.
Because the sun has more mass than anything else in our solar system. Gravity is a function of mass.
It's just over 21%.
Yes. The Sun has over 99% of all the mass.