Well... not much. It's brighter, hotter, bigger, and it can make you go blind.
Gravity.
Every object in the universe exerts a gravitational pull on every other object in the universe. Most of the time, however, these forces are of inconsequential strength. For Venus, the most significant object of influence is the Sun.
Force pairs act on an object when that object exerts a force on another object and, in response, experiences an equal and opposite force from the other object. This is based on Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
The primary force that determines the motions of planets and other objects in the solar system is gravity. This gravitational attraction, primarily exerted by the Sun, governs the orbits of planets, moons, and other celestial bodies, keeping them in stable paths. According to Newton's law of universal gravitation, every mass exerts an attractive force on every other mass, which is responsible for the elliptical orbits observed in planetary motion.
Ptolemy and Copernicus' ideas about the universe are different from each other in the sense that Ptolemy thought that every celestial object as well as the sun and the moon orbited the Earth whereas Copernicus had the thought that all planets orbited the Sun, while the Moon orbited the Earth.
pulls on
Meteorites have probably hit every other object in the solar system.
inertia
We strongly suspect that every other solar system will be different, probably RADICALLY different, from our own. Every star is a little different; the mass that coalesced to form the solar system is different, and the unimaginably random factors that caused each solar system to form as it did - those are also different.
Gravity.
The force that every object exerts on every other object is gravity. Gravity is a universal force of attraction between all masses in the universe, pulling objects towards each other.
Every object in the universe exerts a force called gravity on every other object. This force of attraction depends on the masses of the objects and the distance between them, as described by Newton's law of universal gravitation.
Yes. A gravitational force attracts every mass toward every other mass.
The law of Universal Gravitation states that every object in the universe attracts every other object.
Gravity.
The law of Universal Gravitation states that every object in the universe attracts every other object.
Gravity.