Yes, the sun's mass is a crucial factor in controlling the motions of the planets in our solar system. The sun's gravitational force keeps the planets in orbit around it, shaping their paths and governing their speeds. The more massive an object, like the sun, the stronger its gravitational pull on surrounding objects.
no - they're planets. Suns are stars.
If the number of suns is m and the number of planets is n, then the total number of suns and planets is m+n.
There are no known planets with 7 stars as its suns.
Planets do not have suns orbiting around them. Suns have planets orbiting around them. The planet in our solar system with the highest number of discovered moons orbiting around it is Jupiter, with over 100.
it gives planets sun
No planets are called suns. The Sun is the starat the center of the Solar System
Primordial Mass and Energy.Everything we and the planets are made of came from a sun at one time or another. Hot gas from the sun cools and becomes dust, that collects into molecules and eventually rocks which all form ed the planets, asteroid and such by the force of gravity collecting them together.Even suns are made up of other suns. The only suns that were not are population 1 suns - which coalesced out of the gasses of the universe until the pressure ignited it.
no - they're planets. Suns are stars.
That's because the sun has so much mass ... practically all of the mass in the solar system, and way more than all the planets combined.
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
No. Stars are like suns, around which planets may orbit.
Jupiter
there called planets
ur mother
They are actually reflecting the suns light
no coz it sed on wikpedia
Yeah