earth is big earth has alot of water earth is green and blue.
Pluto's unusual orbit causes it to travel inside Neptune's orbit.
When a moon's orbit is backwards, it is referred to as a retrograde orbit.
Answer: No, Pluto is not an orbit. Pluto is in an orbit: a 2:3 resonance orbit with Neptune.No, Pluto is a dwarf planet.
Planets orbit stars.
Apollo asteroids are a group of near-Earth asteroids with orbits that intersect with Earth's orbit. They are named after the first asteroid of this group discovered, 1862 Apollo. Some Apollo asteroids are classified as potentially hazardous asteroids due to their close approach to Earth.
Satellights are currently the most important objects in orbit today to gather weather information, such as radar and cloud imagery.
Not much, they are made of ice, rock, and dust and orbit the planet.
rocky bodies of material which have accumulated in orbit between mars and Jupiter
If the Moon were to speed up in orbit, it would be further from Earth. Remember, this is governed by angular momentum, not ballistics.
They are natural or man made bodies which orbit a larger body along a regular path.
Hubble is a space telescope which was launched into the earths low orbit in 24th April 1990. Some facts:- Launch Vehicle: Discovery Mass: 11110 kg Orbit Height : 559 km Orbit Period: 96 minutes Some of the instruments on it are: Infrared and ultraviolet spectrometer, wide field optical camera and optical survey camera.
The star's at the center of the solar systems , planets orbit it and while they Revelations they are also at rotation
John Glenn was the first U.S.Marine to orbit the Earth ; more cool facts at the link below .
Yes there is and here are some of them*mercury was named after the roman gods messanger* It is the fastest planet to orbit around the sun*it is 58 million kilometres away
Yes, "orbit" and "revolve around" mean the same thing. Not "rotate" though; that means "spin". The easy way to remember: Earth ROTATES on its axis (spins around) but REVOLVES around the Sun (while its rotating, of course.)
Electrons orbit the nucleus in regions called electron clouds, which have shapes that are described by various mathematical models such as orbitals. These shapes can be spherical, dumbbell-shaped, or more complex, depending on the type of orbital.
From the question, I'm guessing that when the questioner reads the term "polar orbit", he's picturing the satellite doing a little tiny circle in the sky over the North Pole. This is not an accurate understanding of the term. Remember that the center of the orbit of an artificial satellite has to be at the center of the earth. A 'polar orbit' is an orbit that covers both poles. If you picture the globe of the earth, the satellite's orbit is a circle standing up, with the satellite traveling up and down, passing over both poles in each complete revolution of the earth. As the earth rotates, every point on earth passes under the orbit, and sooner or later, every point on earth will be visible from the satellite.