SAturn is in reasonence with my ball sack. I love my balls and fondle them all day long. I hope the turn into a mejestic unicorn! 8==D Suck my balls and you will be granted on wish.
No. But given time - a long time - it is likely that Venus will have a 1:1 orbital resonance with the Sun.
The path of one body around another in space is called an orbit. It is the trajectory that a smaller body, such as a planet or moon, follows around a larger body, such as a star or planet, due to gravitational attraction. Orbits can be elliptical, circular, or even parabolic depending on the velocities involved.
An orbit around another orbit is called a "satellite orbit" or a "suborbital path". This occurs when a smaller object orbits around a larger object, which is itself in orbit around another celestial body.
well..... in simple words i would say that the solar system means up away in the sky were there are nine planets and the first is mercury, venus, earth, mars, Jupiter, Saturn, uranus, neptune, Pluto - in other words: (my very excellent master just set me nine planets)! or another earth or dimention that consists of nine planets!
The earth can not orbit it's self. Orbit means one body going around another.
hi i like pie
An orbital resonance between two celestial bodies happens when two bodies exert a regular gravitational influence on one another. Some scenarios say that a past resonance between Jupiter and Saturn may have cause Uranus and Neptune to switch places.
Yes, Saturn is in orbit around the Sun, like all the other planets in our solar system. It does not share its orbit with another specific solar body, but it does interact gravitationally with other planets and objects in the solar system.
Saturn's orbit is between Jupiter and Uranus. But there are points when the closest large body to Saturn is the Sun.
Yes with pluto
An orbit.
gravity
No
The circular path is known as an orbit.
An orbit.
No, the farther an orbiting body is from the body it's orbiting, the longer the orbit takes. One Saturn year is approximately equal to 29.46 Earth years.
An "orbit" is the path traced as one body moves round another body under the influence of gravity.