There are numerous asteroids, comets, meteors, and dwarf planets in our solar system. An example of each would be Vesta, Hailey's Comet, unnamed until in atmosphere, and Xena.
The largest non-planetary body in the solar system is Ganymede, one of Jupiter's moons. Ganymede is even larger than the planet Mercury and is the only moon known to have its own magnetic field.
Venus is the only planet in the solar system that has a retrograde rotation.
The smallest major planets in the solar system both lack a moon. They are Mercury and Venus. Pluto used to be a major planet and was thought to have no moon. However, it was downgraded to a dwarf planet in 2006 and has several moons.
We live on the planet called Earth which is recognized to be the third planet of our solar system, orbiting our sun called Sol. The solar system is along the outskirts of and revolves, with countless other celestial objects, around the center of a galaxy we call the Milky Way which is one countless other galaxies in the universe, or our universe (if you accept that there is more than one universe).
No, eventually our Sun will burn out.
There are numerous asteroids, comets, meteors, and dwarf planets in our solar system. An example of each would be Vesta, Hailey's Comet, unnamed until in atmosphere, and Xena.
The largest non-planetary body in the solar system is Ganymede, one of Jupiter's moons. Ganymede is even larger than the planet Mercury and is the only moon known to have its own magnetic field.
non-examples of solar system iz galaxies,stars,and light-year
Venus is the only planet in the solar system that has a retrograde rotation.
The smallest major planets in the solar system both lack a moon. They are Mercury and Venus. Pluto used to be a major planet and was thought to have no moon. However, it was downgraded to a dwarf planet in 2006 and has several moons.
non-examples of solar system iz galaxies,stars,and light-year
Mercury. Whilst it is not the most dense (Earth being the most dense planet of the Solar System), without gravitation compression on the Earth, Mercury would be the most dense. So if Earth was the same size as Mercury, Mercury would be the densest planet. It is also the smallest planet.
We live on the planet called Earth which is recognized to be the third planet of our solar system, orbiting our sun called Sol. The solar system is along the outskirts of and revolves, with countless other celestial objects, around the center of a galaxy we call the Milky Way which is one countless other galaxies in the universe, or our universe (if you accept that there is more than one universe).
non-examples of solar system iz galaxies,stars,and light-year
No, eventually our Sun will burn out.
In our local solar system, the inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) and Pluto (if you still count this as a planet) are non gas giants. The Gas Giants are the outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus).
No. Its the third. I'm not sure of the reason on some old solar system charts that the Earth is in orbit number four around the sun. On the old charts there are three planets circling the sun, then the Earth. These charts date back to the 1600's and were at first inacurate. Let me do some research and I will repost to this answer.