they would probably collide with a comet, asteroid, the Sun, or another planet.
Then the laws of physics would be broken. An impossibility.
The orbits of the planets would all be much larger if the sun had less gravity. They might even just fly off free.
They would have banged into each other, split up, gone off in different directions and regrouped into planets with different orbits.
If the arrangement of planets in the solar system were to reverse suddenly, it would likely have catastrophic consequences for the stability and orbits of the planets. Gravity and orbital dynamics are finely balanced in our solar system, so a sudden reversal could lead to collision or ejection of planets from their orbits, resulting in significant disruptions to the entire system.
Earth and Venus DO follow elliptical orbits around the sun (though the orbit of Venus is only very slightly elliptical). Earth's orbit being elliptical is, combined with our axial tilt, why we have seasons.
i do not this answer that's why i am asking you this answer.
Then the laws of physics would be broken. An impossibility.
If the planets did not move in their fixed orbits they may dash each other.
Planets can't really get out of their orbits because of gravity; if gravity somehow stopped having an effect, the planets would continue in a straight inertial line with inertia from the point at which gravity stopped.
The orbits of the planets would all be much larger if the sun had less gravity. They might even just fly off free.
They would have banged into each other, split up, gone off in different directions and regrouped into planets with different orbits.
Currently the gravitation pull of the Sun is balanced by the momentum the planets have due to their velocities. If the Planets were to slow down they would be pulled closer to the Sun. They could be pulled into the Sun or regain stable orbits as the Sun's gravity increased their speeds again.
It would ruin the solar system and might destroy the other planets because they are in the way of the suns orbiting circle and all the planets would be floating in sapce all over the place or the sun and all the other planets will have to orbit the earth and it will become the earth system-dont think it's going to happen though
No, i think they would go hurtling off into space. No, all the planets in our solar system orbit the way they do because of the sun's gravitational pull on them.
If the arrangement of planets in the solar system were to reverse suddenly, it would likely have catastrophic consequences for the stability and orbits of the planets. Gravity and orbital dynamics are finely balanced in our solar system, so a sudden reversal could lead to collision or ejection of planets from their orbits, resulting in significant disruptions to the entire system.
All the planets would go out of their orbits and the Sun wouldn't warm the Earth, therefore erasing all life on Earth.
Earth and Venus DO follow elliptical orbits around the sun (though the orbit of Venus is only very slightly elliptical). Earth's orbit being elliptical is, combined with our axial tilt, why we have seasons.