No. The planets orbit the sun.
No planets are in orbit around the moon
Not our (the Earth's) moon but Jupiter has lots of its own moons that orbit it.
All the planets orbiting the sun can be called moons of the sun
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
The Moon, Sun and planets all appear in a strip of sky called the ecliptic. It is a plane defined by the plane of the Earth's orbit and the Sun is always on the ecliptic, while the Moon and planets stay close to it.
No, they don't. But most of our planets that orbit the sun do.
No planets are in orbit around the moon
the planets do not orbit the moon but the moon orbits the planets because of gravity and inertia
None. This is a trick question. Moons orbit PLANETS. Planets orbit the Sun.
Moons orbit planets Or rather moons and planets orbit their barycenter.
A Lunar System
Not our (the Earth's) moon but Jupiter has lots of its own moons that orbit it.
Not all of them. Six of the eight planets in our solar system have at least one moon.
Planets orbit stars, moons orbit planets. That is the only difference.
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.
All known moons. But in theory, there could be a moon orbiting a larger moon, if the large moon was far enough away from the planet.
Yes, there are moons that do not orbit planets but instead orbit other celestial bodies like asteroids or dwarf planets. For example, some moons of dwarf planets in the Kuiper Belt do not orbit a planet.