Planetary orbits are eliptical, that is they are shaped as elipses.
All planets revolve around the sun anti-clockwise as viewed from Earth's north pole.
Like the other planets, Uranus has an elliptical orbit as it moves around the sun rather than a circular orbit. Uranus has an axial tilt of 99 degrees, which is a lot, considering the axial tilt of the Earth is 23.5 degrees.
Ellipses
in a oval shape not really a circle ANSWER:OVAL
Yes, the orbits of inner planets in our solar system are relatively closely spaced compared to the outer planets. This is due to the gravitational influence of the massive gas giants further out, which helps maintain the spacing of the inner planets.
An elliptical orbit is a flattened circle or oval-like shape followed by a planet as it travels around the sun. It is a common shape observed in celestial bodies' paths due to the gravitational pull between them.
Shape, rotation-direction, and orbit-direction.
Like the other planets, Uranus has an elliptical orbit as it moves around the sun rather than a circular orbit. Uranus has an axial tilt of 99 degrees, which is a lot, considering the axial tilt of the Earth is 23.5 degrees.
Elliptical Orbit
Planets don't revolve around the Earth.Planets revolve around the Sun in ellipses.
The Sun does not orbit the planets. The planets orbit the Sun. The Sun is stationary with relation to the planets' motion. The Sun does, however, orbit the Milky Way galaxy, as do the planets and everything else in the galaxy.
Ellipse.
An ellipse.
Planets orbit in an ellipse.
Ellipses
According to Keplers first law of 1618 which has not been repealed yet, the planets each move in an elliptical orbit with the Sun occupying one focus. The shape of an ellipse is described by the eccentricity. For low eccentricity such as the planets' orbits have, the orbit is very close to being a circle but the most significant difference is that the Sun is off-centre.
2 years
As with all the planets, the orbit of Neptune is a nearly circular ellipse.