Mainly planets, which may have moons, but stars are also orbited by dwarf planets (like Pluto and Sedna), and space debris (like our asteroid belt).
No
=What orbits the Earth is the only thing you can see at night. It's not stars. I know you can see them at night, but it's not them. It's the Moon.=
They are either other solar systems, nebulas (Dead solar systems) Blackholes, other galaxies or stars that have no orbits
Bulges, in the language of astronomy, refers to a tightly packed collection of stars. Bulges are generally composed of old stars with reddish hues and random orbits.
Halo stars are older and have lower metallicity compared to disk stars. They often have orbits that take them further away from the plane of the galaxy and they are thought to have formed through different mechanisms, such as mergers with other galaxies or early galactic collapse.
the orbits of binary stars
The Earth orbits one star, which we simply call "Sun".
Stars mainly everything to me thanks fr helping me
Because it orbits
No
The Moon orbits the Earth.
parallax :)
Binary stars are very useful for determining the mass of the stars and thus any objects orbiting around them.
No. The stars will influence each other gravitationally, and eventually change their orbits.No. The stars will influence each other gravitationally, and eventually change their orbits.No. The stars will influence each other gravitationally, and eventually change their orbits.No. The stars will influence each other gravitationally, and eventually change their orbits.
their orbits in binary systems
Planets cannot have stars orbiting them by definition.
Orbits around the sun.Of course