There is 8 planets in our solar system. There was once 9 before Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet.
There is no such planet. They all move counterclockwise (when viewed from above the Earth's north pole, which is the usual definition).
They all move in the same way - going continuously round their elliptical orbits, following Kepler's laws of planetary motion under the Sun's gravitational force.
Are you sure this question is correct? It takes the Earth one day "to move round the sun in one day"
Yes. Neptune orbits the sun.
Only the two inner planets can move across the Sun. Mercury and Venus can pass between us and the Sun and we see a small black circle moving across the Sun's disk, which takes 3-4 hours, and that is a transit. The other planets go round behind us relative to the Sun and have an opposition instead.
The earth revolve around the sun
There is no such planet. They all move counterclockwise (when viewed from above the Earth's north pole, which is the usual definition).
The sun does not move around the earth.
haha
Its orbit.
Orbit.
summer
365
Each planet moves in its own elliptical orbit round the Sun, then and now.
Gravity. The closer a planet is to the sun, the faster it must move to keep from falling into the sun. So note; the closer in; the smaller the orbit AND the faster the speed.
Planets move in free fall round the Sun, taking from 88 days (Mercury) to 164 years (Neptune). The far-out ones move more slowly because the Sun's gravity force is weaker out there.
The Earth moves around the sun.