The planets maintain their orbit around the sun because of the gravitational attraction between the sun and the planet. All massive objects have an attraction to each other (the force is proportional to the product of the two masses divided by the square of the distance between them). Planets in orbit are in balance between the law of momentum which makes them tend to go in straight line and the gravitational law which makes then tend to accelerate into the sun.
Planets move in orbit because of their own inertia and the gravity of the sun. The sun pulls things to it, and the inertia of a body wants to send it off on a tangent from the arc along which it is traveling. Between the two, bodies will carve out an orbit around the sun.
The planets orbit the Sun because of gravity and their angular momentum, which ultimately derives from the energy of the Big Bang.
The planets do not crash into each other because they are in constant motion around the sun due to their gravitational pull. Additionally, the vast distances between planets and the empty space in our solar system prevent collisions from occurring.
These particles are called atoms.
The gravitational pull between the planets and the sun keep the planets orbiting the sun all day everyday.
the orbits
The planets maintain their orbit around the sun because of the gravitational attraction between the sun and the planet. All massive objects have an attraction to each other (the force is proportional to the product of the two masses divided by the square of the distance between them). Planets in orbit are in balance between the law of momentum which makes them tend to go in straight line and the gravitational law which makes then tend to accelerate into the sun.
the gravitational pull of the sun is making the planets orbit it.
Gravity isn't it?
Planets orbit around the Sun because of the Sun's gravitational force, it makes the planets move by its gravitational force.
Planets revolve around the sun due to the gravitational force exerted by the sun. This force keeps the planets in orbit as they move through space, following elliptical paths. The balance between the planet's inertia and the sun's gravitational pull determines the planet's orbit around the sun.
Planets are held in orbit around a star by gravity. Gravity is the force of attraction between objects with mass, and it is what keeps planets in their respective orbits around stars like our Sun. Without gravity, planets would not be able to maintain their position in space.
Planets move in orbit because of their own inertia and the gravity of the sun. The sun pulls things to it, and the inertia of a body wants to send it off on a tangent from the arc along which it is traveling. Between the two, bodies will carve out an orbit around the sun.
Empty space, mainly.
Kepler's 1st law states that the orbits of the planets around the sun and makes an ellipse. This is taught in astronomy.
What makes up frozen gases are little particles that are roaming around in the solar system, and the little particles that come off every planet, come together to make frozen gas, and it goes on top of another planet to make it more cold, most likely the planets that are more far away from the sun, like Pluto, or any of the planets with rings, not the planets closer to the sun because the FROZEN gas will just melt and let out into space like how it started off. Now you know what frozen gas is. =]