Such an object is said to be in free fall.
The ozone layer is mostly affected the by the suns ultraviolet rays. This layer is present in the stratospheric region of atmosphere.
Yes, it is.
Yes. Asteroids have some gravity, but it is very weak because of their low mass in comparison to an actual planet.
Basically Gravity. The farther the planet is from the Sun, not only has it a longer distance to travel, but also the slower its speed, as it is less affected by the Suns gravity. See link for further information
It holds the planets in place so that they dont float into space and also means that they orbit the sun. this creates the seasons due to tilt
The sun controls gravity in our solar system keeping the planets in orbit just as the earth keeps the moon in orbit. Depending on how close you are to a planet will determine whether the suns or that planets gravity will act upon you. Gravity is everywhere in space.
Everything is held together by the Suns gravity , so it stays in orbit.
The sun gravity is stronger
The photons are affected because the gravitational field affects space-time. Therefore, the photons are responding to the shape of space-time rather than the gravity itself. The photons in question i suppose are coming from stars and that means they are traveling through space and space is a clear medium. When light travels through a medium it's frequency is lowered and its direction changes. If you were referring to the 1919 eclipse, the stars behind the sun that became visible was due to the suns coronal medium that their light passed through. It was an optical illusion. gravity guru.
yes, Space would still be an Extreme Environment because it still has no oxygen, food or water and is both extremely hot and extremely cold.;PContinued...There is gravity in space. This is what keeps our moon in orbit. The suns gravity keeps Earth and her siblings in orbit. The gravity of the super massive black hole at the center of our galaxy is what keeps our sun in orbit within our galaxy. So, there absolutely is gravity is space, but space is still an extreme envrionment.
The sun itself
The Sun's gravity, at its surface, is about 28 times Earth's surface gravity.
Actually the gravity cannot affect the suns movement. But without gravity, every planet would stop orbiting and sail off out of here in a straight line.
The ozone layer is mostly affected the by the suns ultraviolet rays. This layer is present in the stratospheric region of atmosphere.
That depends what you weigh it on. The force of gravity between two objects depends on the masses of BOTH objects that interact, as well as the distance between them.Therefore, when talking about objects in space, such as planets, suns, galaxies, etc., you will normally not see information about their WEIGHT - but rather, about their MASS. The mass usually won't change quickly - for example, for an object to gain mass, you would have to add something to it.
the suns gravity keeps the planets in orbit
Yes, it is.