No. Planets cannot share the same orbit. If they did, they would collide.
Planets orbit stars.
That refers to "planets" which don't orbit stars - technically they would therefore not be planets, though they may share many other characteristics of planets.
Gravity
Moons orbit around planets. They are natural satellites that are held in orbit by the planet's gravitational pull.
All planets orbit around a sun.
Because their distances are not the same from the Sun. Minus this factor, it is impossible for any planets to orbit on the same orbitation.
No two planets share the same moon.
all the planets have the same orbit just different orbit rings
False. While most comets orbit the Sun in the same direction as the planets (counterclockwise when viewed from above Earth's North Pole), there are exceptions. Some comets have retrograde orbits, meaning they orbit in the opposite direction of the planets.
Yes asteroids orbit the sun counter-clockwise, just like all the planets
Planets orbit stars.
That refers to "planets" which don't orbit stars - technically they would therefore not be planets, though they may share many other characteristics of planets.
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
Yes asteroids orbit the sun counter-clockwise, just like all the planets
There isn't one. They all orbit in roughly the same plane. Pluto orbits in a different plane, but that's not classed as a planet now, of course.
"No"
both are planets and are orbit with centripetal force. think about the atmospheres. They orbit around one another.