Planets found outside our own solar system are called exo-solar planets or exoplanets. These are in orbit around other stars. It's ver difficult to detect them due to the distances involved, but with modern techniques, over 500 have been confirmed.
There are eight planets and five dwarf planets in our solar system.
Just one, Earth.
There are 8 planets in our solar system: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
There are eight planets in our solar system.
Intrasolar planets are planets that orbit within a solar system, such as those within our own solar system. These planets revolve around a star, like the Sun, and are part of the same gravitational system.
Planets have no purpose. They just "are".
your question is worded awkwardly (& i know that's just wikianswers), but it sounds like you're asking "are planets only in our solar system" -- no
9 P in the S S = 9 Planets in the Solar System
There are nine planets in the solar system
Extra solar planets are planets that is outside of our solar system.
because that is just that
Actually no, because a solar system is just a place for planets to be there. Solar system is just like space.
Yes, it is. At 2006, the scientists decided that it was not a planet of solar system. Now, there are just eight planets in the solar system.
There are 5 rocky planets in our solar system if you count Pluto. If not, there are 4 rocky planets in the solar system.
There are eight planets and five dwarf planets in our solar system.
The Planets aren't organized in anyway they're just in that order
eight planets in the solar system