It depends what you mean exactly by "wable".
The sun is made of super-hot gas (plasma), and does not wobble in it's spinning -- at least not enough to notice.
Back about 23 years ago, one guy figured out that if the axis of rotation of the sun *was* wobbling (precession is the technical term) -- if it *was*, then it would wobble less than once every 1.2 billion years
2007-02-17 14:15:40
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answer #1
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answered by morningfoxnorth 6
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The Sun does not wobble when it spins. The first main thing is that the Sun is massive. It rotates slowly, and any major shaking of the Sun would cause its contents to be very messed up. The Earth, which relies so much on the Sun for heat and photosynthesis, (along with weather and solar power) would be devastated if the Sun ever did wobble or become shaky in its rotation. The Sun is steady and slow, and as we know, that's what wins the race = )
2007-02-17 20:35:54
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, the center of the sun does revolve in a very small orbit, causing the sun to sort of "wobble". This is because of the tidal forces from the gravity of the planets that orbit the sun.
2007-02-17 21:55:36
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answer #3
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answered by Tikimaskedman 7
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No, however the sun does have an orbit around the middle of the milky way and completes in orbit every 3.9 million years. So it doesn't wobble while it rotates but it does move while it rotates
2007-02-17 22:01:08
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. The sun, like all asronomical bodies is moving through space, and is affected by other bodies's gravitational pull
2007-02-17 23:15:07
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, but very small wobbles, like 50 miles.
2007-02-17 23:15:42
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answer #6
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answered by Alex 3
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