Outside the orbit of a planet lies the vast expanse of space, which includes other celestial bodies such as asteroids, comets, and the potential for additional planets. Beyond these, there are regions of interstellar space filled with gas, dust, and dark matter. Additionally, the gravitational influence of other stars and galaxies comes into play as one moves further away from a planet's orbit. Ultimately, this area transitions into the broader cosmos, encompassing the entire universe.
Neptune is a planet in our solar system and is located outside the orbit of Earth. It is the eighth planet from the Sun.
Jupiter is an outside planet. It is located beyond the orbit of Mars, making it one of the outermost planets in our solar system.
no because stars can orbit each other
All eight of them, plus (sometimes) the dwarf planet Pluto which has an orbit that brings it inside and outside the orbit of Neptune.
Venus is the planet with the closest orbit to that of Earth.
Neptune is a planet in our solar system and is located outside the orbit of Earth. It is the eighth planet from the Sun.
Outer planet....outside the orbit of the earth.
The answer is Eris,a planet just outside Mar's orbit.
Pluto
Jupiter is an outside planet. It is located beyond the orbit of Mars, making it one of the outermost planets in our solar system.
Comets don't orbit a planet, they orbit the sun.
No, Venus does not orbit a planet. It orbits a star, which is our Sun. It can not orbit a planet , if it did it would be a moon
Planets orbit stars, not other planets. A planet-like object that orbits a planet is a moon.
The plane with the smallest orbit is Mercury, and the planet with the largest orbit is Neptune.
no because stars can orbit each other
Neptune.
The shape of a planet's orbit is elliptical.