As the sun is the biggest celestial body in our solar system, so it has the most gravitational pull and therefore the planets n other celestial bodies revolve around the sun.
The gravitational pull between the planets and the sun keep the planets orbiting the sun all day everyday.
Without the planets orbiting the sun all the planets would be cold and dark
No, all the planets, including the Earth, orbit the Sun.
Isaac Newton stated that the universal law of gravitation keeps moons orbiting planets and planets orbiting the sun. This law describes how every mass attracts every other mass in the universe with a force proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers.
They are all orbiting the Sun, therefor all in the Suns gravitational pull.
Geocentric models had the earth as the center of the universe with the sun and all the planets orbiting it. Heliocentric models (the current accepted ones) have the sun as the center, with the earth and planets orbiting it.
As all the planets rotate around the sun at different speads, they are attracted when orbiting the sun.
They all do, its one of the things that is required for a planet to be a planet, directly orbiting the sun.
The planets that make part of the solar system move around the Sun. The huge gravity power of the Sun maintain all planets and moons orbiting around it on an elliptical form.
All the planets orbiting the sun can be called moons of the sun
No. The planets all orbit the sun at the same time. The planets occupy different orbits at different distances from the sun so they do not affect one another significantly.
NO!!!! 7 This was thought of by the 'Ancients' (more than 2000 years ago). They thought the Earth was the centre of the universe. However, Copernicus and Galilieo showed it to be a helio-centric system(Sun centred (Solar System). So all the planets , Earth included , orbit (NOT rotate) or revolve around the Sun. Of themselves the Sun and all the planets rotate on their own axes, to give them 'night and day'.