That would be an elliptical orbit.
The Ecliptic.
I believe you are asking about their orbits around the Sun. The orbit is the (elliptical) path they take around the Sun. It takes a certain amount of time to complete, which is the planet's "year".One calendar year on Earth is (more or less) the time for one full revolution of Earth around the Sun.
Yes - the Earth "orbits" (or revolves) around the Sun at an average distance of 149.59787 million kilometres away. The speed of our orbit is 108,000 km/h and the Earth travels 940 million km during one orbit. A complete orbit of the Earth around the Sun occurs every 365.2563666 days (which is why a year has 365 days - and why we need a "leap year" ever 4 years).
Depends on whether or not you call Pluto a Planet. If so, yes Pluto. Which takes around 248 earth days to orbit the sun. If not, it's Neptune. Which takes 165 earth days to orbit the sun.
It takes a year (about 365 days) to revolve around the Sun once. (Perhaps that's what you meant.)
I wouldn't call it a therapeutic, but the Copernican theory states that the Earth revolves around the Sun.
gravity of the earth
No we cant as earth does not receive or give out information to the sun
No we cant as earth does not receive or give out information to the sun
The Ecliptic.
That's the period of time that we call a "year". It's roughly 365.24 days. Oh by the way ... earth revolves around the sun.
Because the Earth revolves and thus every country takes its turn to be furthest away from the Sun, creating what we call- NIGHTTIME!
It's orbit.
The earth takes 365 days to revolve around the sun.
orbit
A year
Impossible.