Because the moons are the ones revolvimg around the planets (only some planets have moons, not all). And besides, moons aren't in the center of the solar system. They're even smaller than the planets.
There are no planets orbiting the Earth because all eight of them orbit the Sun. But the Moon orbits the Earth, and all it does is go round and round in a rather complicated orbit which is disturbed by the Sun's gravity.
Because of the Sun's gravity.
because that the sun is at one and the moon the other the would turns round so that we can have sun and moon
It makes them go round in circles.
They are the path taken by the gas giant planets (that is Jupiter and Saturn) as they go round the Sun.
Here are the planets that we know. Round and round the sun they go. Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. These are the planets near our star. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, too. Neptune, Pluto, we can't see you. The sun in the middle. It's a hot burning star, These are the planets and the sun, Horah!!!
Planets do not go around the moon.
They go round and round. Not only do they turn on their polar axes, but they also revolve around the Sun. So the planets each have two types of revolution. The Earth turns on its axis every day, and it goes round the Sun once a year.
All 8 planets in our solar system rotate around a star, our sun. Virtually all planets rotate around a star.
Any body that orbits (goes round) another body is called a satellite of that body. Therefore the Moon is a satellite of the Earth and by definition all the Planets are satellites of the Sun. The term 'satellite' is also used to describe man made devices which have been put into orbit round the Earth - however when we make these go round the Sun or other planets we tend to call them 'probes' in this instance.👍
They go round and round the Sun, they have done that for some billions of years and they will continue for some more billions of years.
Jupiter is the planet and the objects that go round it are the moons of Jupiter. (planets go round the Sun - moons go round planets). The 4 jovian moons you can see with a pair of binoculars are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Ganymede is the largest and the most obvious.