I hope you are aware that movement must be expressed in relation to some reference point. If you mean the Solar System's orbital velocity around our Milky Way, that happens at a speed of about 220 km/second. You can base your calculations on that.
It is not any distance from it. Our solar system is in the Milky Way.
they are very far away
5,970,000 km
1,783,950,480 miles. And the Sun is the only star in our solar system.
Pluto is part of our solar system, so it is not located outside of it. The nearest solar system to ours is the Alpha Centauri system, which is about 4.37 light years away from us. Pluto is about 4.67 billion miles away from Earth at its farthest point.
We are in the Solar system.
The moon is in the Solar System.
There is no such "climate" in our solar system, but one thing is true. It is that, as we move far from the Sun, the temperature starts decreasing. That is why, at the edge of our solar system, comets(made up basically of ice) are in majority as compared to asteroids.
stars are pretty far away from the solar system
Our solar system includes our sun in it.
The solar system is by far the smallest.
It is not any distance from it. Our solar system is in the Milky Way.
As far as we know, the Sun is the only star in our Solar System.
There are no galaxies in our, or any other, solar system. They are far too large.
The sun is in front of the solar system and Pluto is at the far end of the Solar system.
Yes, a light year would be useful in a model of the solar system to represent distances between celestial objects, as it is a unit of measurement that denotes the distance light travels in a year. This can help convey the vast scales and distances involved in the solar system.
Mercury is part of our Solar System; our Solar System is part of our galaxy. Look at it this way. Our galaxy - the Milky Way - has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years. We are not precisely in the center of the Milky Way, but everything within the Solar System is within a radius of about 1 light-year - far less in the case of planets in the Solar System (the 1 light-year refers to the Oort Cloud).