Physics, asked by sainaik2005, 4 months ago

) The orbit of a planet is ___________ with the Sun at one of its foci.​


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Answers

Answered by ExoticWylde
4

Answer:

Ellipse

Explanation:

Kepler's First Law. The orbit of every planet is an ellipse with the Sun at one of the two foci. An ellipse is a closed plane curve that resembles a stretched out circle. Note that the Sun is not at the center of the ellipse, but at one of its foci.

Answered by shivanisiri31
0

Answer:

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ellipse

Kepler's First Law. The orbit of every planet is an ellipse with the Sun at one of the two foci. An ellipse is a closed plane curve that resembles a stretched out circle. Note that the Sun is not at the center of the ellipse, but at one of its foci.

Due to the force of gravity, which goes as the inverse of the square, planets trace out an ellipse in space as they orbit around the sun, which is located at a single focus. The other focus is unphysical.

Its foci are two points within the ellipse that describe its shape. For any point on the ellipse, the sum of that points distances to the two foci is the same. The further apart the foci are, the more squashed the ellipse is. ... Kepler tells us that orbits are ellipses, which are like circles with some added eccentricity.


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