the larger the planet is the slower it revolves
Our solar system is the planets
There are eight planets and five dwarf planets in our solar system.
The planets in our solar system revolve around the sun
There are 8 planets in the solar system
There are two reasons. First, since they are farther from the sun they have longer orbital path. Second at a greater distance from the sun the sun's gravity is weaker, giving the outer planets a slower orbital speed.
All planets in our solar system have elliptical orbits.
The ones closest to the Sun.
They all have elliptical paths around the Sun.
They all have elliptical paths around the Sun.
No because the distance between them are always changing. If you were trying to ask if the orbital paths of all the planets about the same distance apart then the answer is still no. The distance from each orbital path varies from each planet to the next. The orbital path of Neptune and Pluto cross one another so this also answers the question, no.
The eight major planets all have 3 things in common that no other objects in our solar system have:They orbit the SunThey are spherical because of their own gravityThey have cleared their orbital paths of smaller objects and debris
No, the closer the planet, the faster the orbital rate.
There are no planets that have constant rise and set times; those times change daily as the Earth and other planets follow their own orbital paths through the solar system. There are two planets that NEVER "rise as the sun sets"; Mercury and Venus are closer to the Sun than Earth is.
9 P in the S S = 9 Planets in the Solar System
There are nine planets in the solar system
Our solar system is the planets
Extra solar planets are planets that is outside of our solar system.