No
No, the Sun is older than the Earth.
The land mass is heavier even tough the sea covers 2/3 of the earth's surface it still has land under the sea hence it is heavier... == == == == Land mass will be heavier than water because it is more dense
No, the equator is not closer to the sun than any other point on Earth. The distance between the Earth and the sun remains constant, so all points on Earth are at the same distance from the sun.
The diameter of the earth is 12,742 kilometers with a volume of 1.08321 E12 cubic kilometers. The sun has a volume of 1.41 E18 cubic kilometers. This means that the sun is about 1,300,000 times the size of the earth.
dont know exact #s but if you made the sun the size of a basketball the earth would be the size of a pea
The Sun is significantly heavier than the Earth. In fact, the Sun's mass is about 333,000 times that of Earth, making it the dominant body in our solar system. Its immense gravitational pull is what keeps the planets, including Earth, in orbit around it.
You would weigh more on the Sun because it is a greater mass, and it has a greater gravitational pull than the Earth. In retrospect, you would weigh less on the moon, since it is smaller and less gravitational pull.
The Sun has a mass of 1.9891×10^30 kg. The Earth has a mass of 5.9736 x 10^24 kg. So the Sun is about 332,900 times heavier than the Earth.
Heavier than what, the sun????
Jupiter moves slower than earth around the sun because the distance between the them is much farther than earth's distance to the sun. Gravity has a stronger pull on earth because gravity depends on the masses and the distance between the objects. (Sun)---->Earth (Sun)---- - - - - - - ->Jupiter
Our Sun is quite heavy.It weighs 1.9891×1030 kgThat is 332,900 times heavier than the Earth.
The sun is far more massive than the moon.
well it is yet it is gas it has so much to it that it is like heavier than over 300 earths...
No, the Sun is older than the Earth.
No, Venus is closer to the Sun than the Earth.
The sun is bigger than the earth that is how they are different.
No. When one body is much more massive than the other, the lighter body (earth) orbits the heavier body (sun). Greater mass wins. The sun's mass is about 2 x 1030 kg. The earth's mass is about 6 x 1024 kg. Therefore the sun is about 300,000 times as massive as earth. Technically, it's most correct to say that both the Sun and the Earth orbit their common center of mass, but because the Sun is so much more massive than the Earth, the common center of mass is a point that's still within the Sun.