yes every sun does have planets because there is only one sun.
if you meant stars no not all stars have planets
Not true, every star you see is actually a sun just like our own. Our sun just so happens to be the only star in our solar system and therefore the closest star to us.
Does every star have its own solar system?
Back in the 1990's, we began to be able to "see" planets about other stars. The nearest stars are so far away that the first evidence that a planet (or planets) orbited them were small observable "shifts" or a "wobble" in the movement of the star (called perturbations). We have now actually been able to see a planet silhouetted against a star! Well over 200 exoplanets (planets outside our solar system) have been catalogued so far, and more are on the way.
But does every star have its own solar system? Probably not all of them. But planetary evolutionists believe that because of the way a "solar system" collects mass and "forms itself" to give itself shape under the hand of gravity, there are going to be many stars that do have their own solar systems (planetary bodies) orbiting about them. We'll still have to wait a bit for more data to get some idea of "what the odds are" for a given star having planets about it, but we're working on it! We live in exciting times, do we not?!
No, the sun does not rotate around all planets. In our solar system, planets orbit around the sun due to its gravitational pull. The sun itself rotates on its axis, influencing the rotation of the planets but not physically orbiting them.
The planets orbit the Sun. The Sun is at the center of our solar system and does not move.
No. There are more than 8 planets in the universe. The Sun (our star) does shine on all planets in our solar system, just in different amounts.
Planets orbit around the sun due to gravitational attraction. The sun's gravitational pull keeps the planets in their orbits, while the planets also exert a gravitational force on the sun, causing it to wobble slightly. The sun provides the heat and light necessary for the planets to sustain life.
Not all the planets orbit the sun - other stars have planets too. But all the planets in our solar system, which is the system of our sun, revolve around the sun; otherwise they would be in other solar systems. All the planets we can see with our naked eye orbit the sun, since the planets orbiting the sun are the only ones close enough to earth to see without a telescope.
Neptune orbits the sun roughly every 165 years.
The planets and other rocky and icy junk in our Solar system are always, every second, orbiting the Sun.
No, the sun does not rotate around all planets. In our solar system, planets orbit around the sun due to its gravitational pull. The sun itself rotates on its axis, influencing the rotation of the planets but not physically orbiting them.
no it can just be the biggest star in that solar system
Gravity from the sun pulls the planets near it and away from it ad away foer it
The sun is a thousand times more massive than all the planets combined. The planets all orbit the sun for this reason--due strictly because of its great mass.
according to newton's law of gravitation every object in the nature attract other due to its gravitational pull so planets revolve around sun.
The sun has the most gravity within the solar system, which pulls all the other planets towards itself. See, the gravity in outerspace is different; it pulls all the balls (planets) together because there is gravity on the sun (every part of the sun) and the spheres create a spinning motion. Since there is no planet exceeding the size and weight of the sun, the sun cannot revolve any planets.
The planets are satellites of the sun. The moons are satellites of the planets. The moons revolve around the planets captured by their gravity, while the planets revolve around the sun captured by its gravity and the sun.
gravity depends on mass (matter) and distance from the sun because every planets gravity is how big it is and how far it is
Every solid member of the solar system, including all of the periodic comets, asteroids, planets, and natural satellites of the planets, revolves around the sun.
Yes it does but the planets closer to the sun get more heat and the planets that are farther away get less heat. That is why Venus is hotter than our Earth and Mars is colder.