No. The sun like all objects in space is bulged on one side or the other, in the case of the sun the bulge is always directed to the center point of the sun.
Also the Sun is a every changing mass, anything with solar flairs is not a perfect anyshape.
no no no
The orbit is not a perfect circle. Applies to all planets/asteroids/comets.
The motions of the Sun and the planets reflect to disk shape of the solar nebula because they follow the same rotation as this disk shape. The rotation of the Sun and the planets is not a perfect circle.
Like all planets, Jupiter does not travel in a perfect circle around the Sun, but in an ellipse. At its closest, Jupiter reaches 741 million km from the Sun. At its furthest, 817 million km.
When Earth orbits the sun, its eccentricity of the orbit is only 0.017. That's very close to 0, a perfect circle. So when it's at its closest to the sun (perihelion) , it doesn't make a difference.
No.
Jupiter does not orbit the sun in a perfect circle
no no no
If by revolution you mean the spin on it's own axis this is more or less a perfect circle. If you are referring to it's orbit around the sun, this is elliptical, not a perfect circle.
The Earth rotates in not a perfect circle around the sun but in a oval shape.
The Earth rotates in not a perfect circle around the sun but in a oval shape.
If by revolution you mean the spin on it's own axis this is more or less a perfect circle. If you are referring to it's orbit around the sun, this is elliptical, not a perfect circle.
Johannes Keplernewtest3
None of the planets orbit the sun perfectly in a circle, there is a degree of deviation from this perfect circle called eccentricity. The higher the eccentricity (more more the eccentric the orbit is) the further away from this perfect circle the orbit is. The planet that deviates most from a perfect circle, having the highest eccentricity, is Neptune. Neptune also has the highest axial tilt, tilted over onto its side as it orbits the sun.
Nearly a perfect circle, with a radius of 93 million miles.
The four poems that are found within A Perfect Circle relate to the different seasons. They are 'Aspects of Eve', 'The Five Stages of Grief', 'Waiting for My Life', and 'PM/AM'.
A Perfect Circle was created in 1999.