Rice?
Well there are many sides to this story. On the one other hand, there is a positive correlation between true and false, making it a great way to conserve Beetles. Next time?? Fish!!
The planets orbit around the sun.
Earth for a start.
Gravity starts it. Small (relatively small, they are still along the lines of a lightyear in diameter) pockets of the cloud which are slightly denser then the rest (because the universe is not uniform, so parts will be denser then others), there is slightly more gravity pulling towards those dense pockets then other, less dense, pockets. As gravity pulls more dust and particles to these pockets, they get denser and thus have more gravity. This cycle continues for millions of years until the particles eventually get so hot and under so much pressure that the nuclear process begins and a star is born. Gravity then also makes planets in the same why, except, of course, they don't get large enough to start a nuclear reaction inside of them.
It didn't. The universe formed with the Big Bang about 13.7 billion years ago. Our solar system didn't form until about 4.6 billion years ago.
In our solar system, the only planet that starts with the letter "R" is Rhea, which is actually a moon of Saturn rather than a planet. However, if considering exoplanets, there may be names of some that start with "R," but none are widely recognized in the same way as the major planets in our solar system.
Some examples of words that start with "solar" are solarium, solar panel, solar system, and solar energy.
The solar system was previously a cloud of interstellar gas.
The planets orbit around the sun.
Earth for a start.
Stars, planets, solar systems, many objects in space can start as a large unstructured nebula of gas and dust, which can coalesce into massive objects under gravitational influence.
Science Solar System Sun
A nebula.
Gravity pulled pieces from the Solar Nebula together causing the hydrogen and helium atoms to start nuclear fusion which eventually created the sun.
So 1st there was a big mass cloud of dust, gas and debris called a nebula 4.6 Billion years ago. Then a nearby star exploded. Thats called a Supernova. The force of the explosion caused the nebula to start "spinning." Everything starting crashing into each other. The collision between the material cause much of the materials to "glue" together. Eventually, 99% of all the mass from the Nebula became the center, which is our Sun. While everything else, the 1% became the celestial bodies like the planets, stars, moons, etc.
Kuiper belt is a solar system word. It is the region beyond all the planets.
rotate, revolve, revolution, redonkulous.
Yes. In fact our Solar System formed because of a supernova explosion. It was the impetus that was needed to get the gaseous clouds to start the initial rotation.