yes the planets are made of matter, all objects are made of matter
Objects that are smaller than planets are called "dwarf planets"; even smaller objects are called "asteroids".
Objects that are in orbit around planets are commonly called satellites
Planets or dwarf planets, depending on their size. (The larger ones would be planets, smaller would be dwarf planets.)
No. Planets do not have dwarf planets. A planet-sized object orbiting a larger planet is a moon. Dwarf planets orbit the sun independent of other objects.
The dwarf planets in the Kuiper Belt are often referred to as trans-Neptunian objects. This term encompasses objects like Pluto, Eris, Haumea, and Makemake, which are considered dwarf planets due to their size and orbit beyond Neptune.
Objects that are smaller than planets are called "dwarf planets"; even smaller objects are called "asteroids".
The largest objects that orbit the sun are planets.
Objects that are in orbit around planets are commonly called satellites
Planets, Dwarf Planets, moons and ring systems of these planets, Comets, Meteors, Asteroids, The Sun, Kuiper belt objects and the Oort cloud.
satellites
In order the planets and objects are:MercuryVenusEarthMarsAsteroid BeltJupiterSaturnUranusNeptunePluto (It's a dwarf planet)
Here are 4 different types of such objects: Planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets. If you just want 4 objects then here are 4 of the planets: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter.
Yes, there are many other objects in the solar system besides planets. Some of these include moons, asteroids, comets, dwarf planets, and Kuiper Belt objects. Each of these objects plays a unique role in shaping the dynamics of our solar system.
Moons.
No. All of the objects in out solar system labeled as dwarf planets are smaller than the smallest of the planets. The gas planets are the largest planets.
All massive objects (including all planets) have gravity.
moons, stars, planets, meteoroid's.