There are no planets orbiting the Earth because all eight of them orbit the Sun.
But the Moon orbits the Earth, and all it does is go round and round in a rather complicated orbit which is disturbed by the Sun's gravity.
Mercury and Venus orbit between the Sun and Earth.
All of them, when the Earth overtakes them in its orbit.
The other planets - and all other bodies - orbit the earth.
Earth and Mars are planets, not stars. Stars are massive celestial bodies that generate light and heat through nuclear reactions in their cores, while planets are smaller bodies that orbit stars. Earth and Mars are both planets in our solar system that orbit the Sun.
NO. They orbit counterclockwise (anticlockwise) when viewed from above the Earth's north pole, which is the usual convention. (Mercury and Venus are called the "inferior planets" because their orbits are between the Sun and the Earth.)
The planets do not orbit the Earth, they orbit the sun.
You cannot have planets orbiting planets. Planets orbit suns. Only satellites orbit planets. In the case of planet Earth, the moon is the only natural satellite.
All the planets in our solar system orbit the Sun, not the Earth.Mercury and Venus orbit between the Sun and the Earth's orbit.
No, all the planets, including the Earth, orbit the Sun.
There are no planets that cross the earth's orbit. Pluto (dwarf, or minor planet) and Neptune are the only planets whose orbits cross. However there are over 100 asteroids (minor planets) that cross the earth's orbit.
Mercury and Venus orbit between the Sun and Earth.
All of them, when the Earth overtakes them in its orbit.
The other planets - and all other bodies - orbit the earth.
There are no planets in orbit between Earth and the Sun. The innermost planet in our solar system is Mercury, followed by Venus, then Earth. The region between Earth and the Sun is occupied solely by asteroids and other small objects.
No, planets orbit around the sun directly.
Gravity
Earth