Because the stars are relatively so far away, all planets of this solar system have the same number of stars near them.
Planets orbit stars.
Planets are not considered satellites, but rather celestial bodies that orbit around stars, like our Sun. Satellites are objects that orbit larger celestial bodies, such as planets orbiting around stars or moons orbiting around planets.
All the planets in OUR solar system orbit around the sun(which is a star). Planets in other solar systems orbit around other stars.
Yes, planets form around stars. In order to be a planet, one of the requirements is that you have to orbit around a sun. Also, as far as physicists can tell, planets form in the dust of other stars that have already died and left their matter.
I'm not sure what you mean by "Star planets." However, I can tell you that there are 8 known planets that orbit the star Sol, including Earth (Sol 3).
No. Stars are like suns, around which planets may orbit.
Planets orbit the sun. Stars do not.
On the contrary! A star has planets, which circulate it. And planets have moons. Stars do not circle planets.
Moons orbit planets. Planets orbit stars. Some stars orbit other stars, or orbit their mutual center of gravity. Stars orbit the center of the galaxy. Galaxies may orbit the center of the "galactic group".
We believe that most stars have planets. The first star PROVABLY detected to have a planet was Gamma Cephei.
planets do not shine with their own energy but shine because of energy of stars. they revolve around stars
Galileo Galilei used a telescope to make detailed observations of the stars and planets. He is most well known for suggesting that the Earth revolves around the Sun, and not the other way around.
there are more planets than stars because to every star there could have several planets
These are planets that are in orbit around other stars, known as exosolar planets.
That doesn't make sense. There are stars, and there are planets. If you mean "planets around stars, other than the Sun", those are usually called "extrasolar planets" or "exoplanets".
around Earth!
Gravity keeps the planets in orbit around the sun and the stars and the stars in orbit around the center of the galaxy. Gravity also holds the stars together against their own internal pressure.