Solar System
Solar
System
Mercury
Mercury
is
the closest planet. It orbits the Sun at an average distance of 58 million km.
Mercury is airless, and so without any significant atmosphere to hold in the
heat, it has dramatic temperature differences. T
he side that faces the Sun experiences temperatures as
high as 420 ºC, and then the side in shadow goes down to -173 ºC.
Mercury is also
the smallest planet in the Solar System, measuring just 4879 km across at its
equator.
Mercury has only been visited two times by spacecraft.
The first was Mariner 10, back in the mid 1970s. It
wasn’t until 2008 that another spacecraft from Earth made a close flyby of
Mercury, taking new images of its surface.
Venus
Venus is
the second planet in the Solar System, and it’s an almost virtual twin of Earth
in terms of size and mass.
Venus orbits at an average distance of 108 million km,
and completes an orbit around the Sun every 224 days.
Apart from the size, though, Venus is very different
from Earth. It has an extremely thick atmosphere made almost entirely of carbon
dioxide that cloaks the planet and helps heat it up to 460 °C.
If you could stand on the surface of Venus, you would
experience 92 times the pressure of Earth’s atmosphere, with incredibly high
temperatures, and poisonous clouds of carbon dioxide and sulfuric acid rain.
Several spacecraft have visited Venus, and a few landers
have actually made it down to the surface to send back images of its hellish landscape.
Even though there were made of metal, these landers only
survived a few hours at best.
Earth
Earth is our home; the third planet from the Sun. It
orbits the Sun at an average distance of 150 million km
. Earth is the only planet in the Solar System known to
support life. This is because our atmosphere keeps the planet warm from the
vacuum of space, but it’s not so thick that we have a runaway greenhouse
effect.
The Earth has a solid core of iron surrounded by a
liquid outer core that generates a magnetic field that also helps protect life
on Earth from the radiation of space.
No planet in the Solar System has been studied as well
as Earth, both on the ground and from space.
Thousands of spacecraft have been launched to study the
planet, measuring its atmosphere, land masses, vegetation, water, and human
impact.
Earth has only a single moon… the Moon.
Mars
The 4th planet from the Sun is Mars, the second smallest
planet in the Solar System. It orbits the Sun at an distance of 228 million km.
You might think Mars is large, but it’s a tiny world,
with about half the diameter of Earth, and just 1/10th the Mass.
If you could
stand on the surface of Mars, you’d experience about 1/3rd Earth’s gravity.
Mars has almost no atmosphere to help trap heat from the
Sun, and so temperatures can plunge below -140 °C in the Martian winter.
Even at the height of summer, temperatures can get up to
20 °C in the day – just barely shirt sleeve weather.
Mars has been heavily studied by spacecraft. There are
rovers and landers on the surface, and orbiters flying overhead. It’s probably
the likeliest place to search for life in the Solar System.
Mars has two tiny asteroid-sized moons: Phobos and
Deimos.
Jupiter
Mighty Jupiter is the biggest planet in our Solar
System. It’s so large, in fact, that it has 2.5 times the mass of all the rest
of the planets in the Solar System combined.
Jupiter orbits from the Sun at an average distance of
779 million km. Its diameter at the equator is 142,984 km across; you could fit
11 Earths side by side and still have a little room.
Jupiter is almost entirely made up of hydrogen and
helium, with trace amounts of other elements.
Jupiter has been visited by several spacecraft, including
NASA’s Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft; Cassini and New Horizons arrived more
recently.
Only the Galileo
spacecraft has ever gone into orbit around Jupiter, and it was crashed into the
planet in 2003 to prevent it from contaminating one of Jupiter’s icy moons.
Jupiter has the most moons in the Solar System – it has
63 moons at last count.
Saturn
Saturn is the 6th planet from the Sun, and the 2nd
largest planet in the Solar System. It orbits the Sun at an average distance of
1.4 billion km.
Saturn measures 120,000 km across; only a little less
than Jupiter. But Saturn has much less mass, and do it has a low density.
In fact, if you
had a pool large enough, Saturn would float!
Of course, the most amazing feature of Saturn is its rings.
These are made of
particles of ice ranging in size from a grains of sand to the size of a car.
Some scientists think the rings are only a few hundred
million years old, while others think they could be as old as the Solar System
itself.
Saturn has been visited by spacecraft 4 times: Pioneer
11, Voyager 1 and 2 were just flybys, but Cassini has actually gone into orbit
around Saturn and has captured thousands of images of the planet and its moons.
And speaking of moons, Saturn has a total of 60 moons
discovered (so far).
Uranus
Next comes Uranus, the 7th planet from the Sun.
It orbits the Sun at an average distance of 2.9 billion
km. Uranus measures 51,000 km across, and is the 3rd largest planet in the
Solar System.
While all of the planets are tilted on their axes,
Uranus is tilted over almost on its side. It has an axial tilt of 98°.
Uranus was the first planet to be discovered with a
telescope; it was first recognized as a planet in 1781 by William Herschel.
Only one spacecraft, Voyager 2, has ever visited Uranus
up close. It passed by the planet in 1986, and captured the first close images.
Uranus has 27 known moons.
Neptune
Neptune is the 8th and final planet in the Solar System,
orbiting at an average distance of 4.5 billion km from the Sun.
It’s the 4th largest planet, measuring about 49,000 km
across.
It might not be as big as Jupiter, but it’s still 3.8
times larger than Earth – you could fit 57 Earths inside Neptune.
Neptune is the second planet discovered in modern times.
It was discovered at the same time by both Urbain Le Verrier and John Couch
Adams.
Neptune has only ever been visited by one spacecraft,
Voyager 2, which made a fly by in August, 1989.
Neptune has 13 known moons.
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