Well, isn't that just a delightful question! Just like our little furry woodland creatures, the sun gracefully spins about in the midst of the Milky Way, neither too fast nor too slow, swaying along at about 514,000 miles per hour. Isn't that just a lovely thought to ponder? Remember, there's no rush in this big, beautiful world – we're all just floating along at the perfect speed.
There are around 200 to 400 billion stars in our galaxy. It is more correct to call them stars, rather than "Suns", because the name "Sun" is the name of our star. You wouldn't call all Americans Sam, would you?
No, stars do not revolve around the Sun. The Sun is just one of the billions of stars in our galaxy, the Milky Way, and stars have their own independent motion through the galaxy. The Sun's gravity keeps the planets in orbit around it, but it does not control the motion of other stars.
No, the sun is an object. A fairly ordinary star. An orbit is the closed circular path taken by an object around another object. The suns orbit is the path it takes around the galactic centre. A journey of some 250 million years to complete one orbit. In comparison the earths orbit around the sun takes one year.
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
Mercury does get affected by the sun's gravity, which keeps it in orbit around the sun. However, the speed at which Mercury orbits the sun, along with its distance from the sun, allows it to maintain a stable orbit rather than being pulled in completely.
Yeah
There are around 200 to 400 billion stars in our galaxy. It is more correct to call them stars, rather than "Suns", because the name "Sun" is the name of our star. You wouldn't call all Americans Sam, would you?
When the pull is stronger, they move quicker.
When the pull is stronger, they move quicker.
No, stars do not revolve around the Sun. The Sun is just one of the billions of stars in our galaxy, the Milky Way, and stars have their own independent motion through the galaxy. The Sun's gravity keeps the planets in orbit around it, but it does not control the motion of other stars.
No. Stars are like suns, around which planets may orbit.
Yes, most everything in the universe has an orbital path around another large body. The sun revolves around the center of the milky way galaxy, which is a supermassive black hole. Many suns revolve around black holes or other large bodies with large gravitional pulls.
The Sun's location is in the middle of the solar system and all of the planets orbit around it.
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The suns huge gravitational force keeps the planets in an orbit around it.
The orbit of the sun through our galaxy is thought by many scientists to be almost circular. Since the sun takes about 225 million years to complete one orbit, little proven data is available to support most hypotheses regarding the orbit of the sun.
the gravititonal pull does; it is what keeps all the planet in the suns orbit xx