Surroundings
All bodies in the Solar System do, but outside of that - the Universe - have their own time frame.
Einstein admitted there is no difference between geocentric and non geocentric as they are both relative to the observer in a closed system such as our universe. There is no way to tell if either is true unless one is outside the universe looking in.
Universe, galaxy,nebula,solar system, star, planet
Universe: It contains everything.
The full question is:What lists the relative sizes from smallest to largest(1) our solar system, universe, Milky Way Galaxy(2) our solar system, Milky Way Galaxy, universe(3) Milky Way Galaxy, our solar system, universe(4) Milky Way Galaxy, universe, our solar system(2) our solar system, Milky Way Galaxy, universe
the term is "the surroundings" or "the environment"
No one knows.
Jupiter has the greatest gravitational field in the Solar System. The Universe is a lot bigger and we are only just starting to discover some of the planets outside our Solar System.
You can define a system as part of the universe on which you focus your attention. The surroundings include everything else in the universe. In thermochemical experiments, you can consider the region in the immediate vicinity of the system as the surroundings. A major goal of thermochemistry is to examine the flow of heat between the system and its surroundings.
Nothing whatsoever is know about life in other parts of the universe. It is not even known whether or not life exists anywhere outside the Solar System.
All bodies in the Solar System do, but outside of that - the Universe - have their own time frame.
A system is said to be closed when it doesn't interact with the outside world. This is a theoretical idea; in real systems, it is impossible to entirely eliminate contact with other parts of the Universe.
Can't be specific because specific environments exist only in the context of specific systems. Why? Because by definition the environment is that physical or functional region that exists outside the system. If the system is an open system, it will have one or more relationships with its environment. But if the system is a closed one it will have not relationship at all with its environment. So when the system is open, the environment can influence how the system functions. For example, the human body is an open system. It takes in nourishment from the environment and gets rid of wastes into the environment. On the other hand we presume the global universe is a closed system that has no relationships with anything outside the universe. So with this short introduction as to what an environment is re systems, we can say that in general an environment has these properties: It provides the context within which a system operates. It provides some resources for the system to operate with. It can provide direction and goals for the system's operation. It can provide destination (markets) for whatever the system produces.
The definition of "universe" is "everything". That includes the solar system Since the solar system is a part of the universe, and since there is other stuff in addition to the solar system, and since there is nothing more in addition to the universe, we can see that the universe is bigger than the solar system.
A system is said to be closed when it doesn't interact with the outside world. This is a theoretical idea; in real systems, it is impossible to entirely eliminate contact with other parts of the Universe.
Any distances between two points outside the solar system, or betweenanything inside the solar system and anything outside it, are.(With the exception of the distances now being estimated between exoplanetsand their respective host-stars.)
Currently there are 353 known extrasolar planets (that is to say, outside of our solar system), but it is unknown how many planets exist in the universe.