its solar system if i wrong can u correct it pls.
Pluto is the only one that has been taken away from the solar system for now but more planets are beginning to be argued over. Pluto was taken out because it was a moon.
A year by definition is the time it takes a planet to orbit the Sun, therefore a planet year is different depending on what planet you are discussing. a planet closer to the Sun would have a shorter year (less distance to travel) whereas a planet farther from the Sun would have a longer year (more distance to travel)This is the time taken for the planet to orbit once around the sun. An earth year is still an earth year, regardless of what plaet you are on.The period of time that it takes for a planet in our solar system to make a complete revolution around the sun.As such due to their differing orbits this can vary considerably from an 88 day year for Mercury (approx. 1/4 of an Earth year) up to a 90,613 day year for Pluto (approx. 248 Earth years).
The time taken to complete an orbit increases as the distance from the sun increases. This relationship is described by Kepler's Third Law of Planetary Motion, which states that the square of the orbital period of a planet is directly proportional to the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit. This means that planets farther from the sun have longer orbital periods.
Kepler's third law of planetary motion states that the time taken for a planet to revolve around the sun (or its period) is proportional to its distance from the sun. Therefore the closer the planet is to the sun, the faster its orbit. So the answer is: the closest planet to the sun which is......Mercury.
its solar system if i wrong can u correct it pls.
Neptune is the planet that takes the longest time to orbit our sun, in terms of time taken and distance. Pluto and some other dwarf planets take longer, but these are not considered to be one of the eight major planets in our solar system.
Pluto is the only one that has been taken away from the solar system for now but more planets are beginning to be argued over. Pluto was taken out because it was a moon.
The planet that got taken away from the solar system was pluto it was no longer a planet because it circles around the sun differently
Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system. Pluto might have been the smallest planet, but it has now been reclassified as a "dwarf planet." The smallest planet in our solar system now is Mercury. There might well be billions of smaller planets outside for solar system. The smallest exoplanet found so far is about twice the size of the Earth.
It is debated whether Pluto formed with the other planets or if it was captured while passing through the solar system. If the second option is true it would explain why the orbit it so erratic through the concept that it came from outside the solar system. However the orbit itself does not follow the typical elliptical pattern the other planets follow which seems to support the outside capture theory, however, there is no way to know at this point until there are samples taken from the planet.
It has to do with the formation of the solar system. Since all of the matter that condensed into what makes the solar system bodies was spinning in the same direction while coming together, it would have taken a drastic event to cause one of the bodies to orbit in a different direction.
It has to do with the formation of the solar system. Since all of the matter that condensed into what makes the solar system bodies was spinning in the same direction while coming together, it would have taken a drastic event to cause one of the bodies to orbit in a different direction.
It has to do with the formation of the solar system. Since all of the matter that condensed into what makes the solar system bodies was spinning in the same direction while coming together, it would have taken a drastic event to cause one of the bodies to orbit in a different direction.
Pluto is not a planet anymore, because it is considered a dwarf, to be a planet it needs to have certain qualities, such as the size, so the sun gravity has nothing to do with it. The wording "Pluto is not a planet anymore" implies that at one time it was, which is not the case. Pluto hasn't changed; what's changed is that the definition of "planet" has become more precise. So: Pluto is not a planet. It also was not taken from another solar system; it's a tiny little iceball that happened to be discovered before all the other tiny little iceballs out there.
That is a "year" for that planet.
The orbit.