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The Solar System
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Solar System Facts
- The solar system is around 4.6 billion years old.
- There are eight major planets and over 100 moons in the solar system.
- Other objects in the solar system include dwarf planets, asteroids and comets.
- Many bodies in the solar system are visible to the naked eye.
- Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars are the small rocky planets. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are the gas giants.
- The sun is by far the largest object in the solar system.
- All the planets orbit the sun in an eliptical, oval shaped path.
- The solar system is in the galaxy known as "The Milky Way".
- Astronomers have found many other stars in our galaxy which have planets orbiting around them. There are around 200 billion stars in the milky way.
- The Voyager 1 spacecraft is the furthest man-made object in the solar system, it is around 10.5 billion miles (17 billion km) from the sun and is still sending data back to Earth.
Birth of the Solar System
The solar system began life around 4.6 billion years ago as part of a dark nebula cloud of molecular hydrogen and dust. Temperatures at the center of this dark cloud were extremely cold allowing gravity to condense the hydrogen, clumping the molecules together until its mass grew larger and hotter, eventually collapsing in on itself, forming the early stage of a star called a protostar. The gravitational pull of the young star created a large disc of gas and dust to form around it.
Over millions of years the protostar became hotter and hotter until eventually nuclear fusion occurred in its core causing it to expand and explode, creating our sun and sending matter scattering outward in every direction. In time the remainder of the gas and debris forming around the sun cooled off to form metal, rock and ice. This matter would go on to form the planets, moons, asteroids, comets and other bodies in our solar system.
Planets of the Solar System
The nearest planet to the sun is Mercury, aptly named after the swift footed messenger god it orbits the sun in only 88 days, quicker than any other planet in the solar system.
Next comes Venus, often referred to as Earth’s sister planet but underneath her thick clouds lies a hellish oven baked landscape with temperatures hot enough to melt lead.
Third planet from the sun lies Earth, a striking blue sphere covered with oceans of liquid water and the only planet known to us which
harbors life.
The last of the rocky inner planets is Mars, consisting of a thin atmosphere this red body was once covered in oceans just like Earth but is now a desert where dust storms can engulf the entire planet.
Almost 800 million kilometers from the sun we find the first of the gas giants, Jupiter, enormous in its size it would take over a 1,000 Earths to fill its volume.
Saturn is the second of the gas giants and is unlike any other planet in the solar system with its spectacularly
colorful rings made from dust and ice particles.
Then comes the first of the planets known as ice giants, Uranus, this large turquoise ball of gas lies tilted on its side with freezing atmospheric temperatures of -371 Fahrenheit.
At 4.5 billion kilometers from the sun we find the last of the planets, Neptune, a blue ice giant where winds in the atmosphere reach over 2,000
kilometers per hour.
As mankind explores space we have found that some of the moons in our solar system are equally and at times even more fascinating than the planets themselves.
Jupiter’s wonderfully colored moon Io is the most volcanically active object in the solar system, Saturn’s moon Titan has a thick nitrogen based atmosphere which rains methane producing liquid lakes on its surface. Another of Saturn’s moons Enceladus has volcanoes which erupt with water ice and possibly has a liquid ocean underneath its icy surface. Then there is the ice world of Europa, another of Jupiter’s fascinating moons, underneath its surface lies a vast ocean of liquid water which is 100 km deep and possibly teeming with life.
At the center of the solar system is our sun, a massive ball of hydrogen and helium over a hundred times larger in diameter than Earth producing immense heat and enormous explosions which jettison solar winds millions of miles into space.
Between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter lies the Asteroid Belt, millions of rocks reside in this area some as large as 60 miles (100 km) in diameter.
Beyond Neptune we reach the Kuiper Belt where we find most of the dwarf planets including Pluto, at one time considered the ninth planet in our solar system this tiny body orbits the Sun at an average distance of almost 6 billion kilometers.
Comets originate in the Kuiper Belt or the even more far flung Oort Cloud, a massive spherical cloud of icy bodies that surrounds the solar system.
Moons of the Solar System
Other Bodies in the Solar System
Learn about stars, galaxies, nebulae and exoplanets by visiting the Universe section.
The Planets in Scale of Size - Click here for larger image |

Life in the Solar System

Our Galaxy and the Universe

Solar System Statistics
Diameter of the Solar System: Unknown (possibly 2 to 3 light years)
Distance from center of Galaxy: 25 million light years
Orbital Period: 250 million years
Age: 4.6 billion years
Number of Planets: 8
Number of Dwarf Planets: 5
Number of Moons: 173
Rocky Planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars
Gas Giants: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune
Dwarf Planets: Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, MakeMake and Eris
Nearest Planet to Sun: Mercury (58 million km)
Farthest Planet from Sun: Neptune (4.5 billion km)
Farthest Man Made Object from Sun: Voyager 1 (17 billion km)
Distance from center of Galaxy: 25 million light years
Orbital Period: 250 million years
Age: 4.6 billion years
Number of Planets: 8
Number of Dwarf Planets: 5
Number of Moons: 173
Rocky Planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars
Gas Giants: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune
Dwarf Planets: Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, MakeMake and Eris
Nearest Planet to Sun: Mercury (58 million km)
Farthest Planet from Sun: Neptune (4.5 billion km)
Farthest Man Made Object from Sun: Voyager 1 (17 billion km)
Largest Planet: Jupiter (Diameter 142,984 km)
Smallest Planet: Mercury (Diameter 4,879 km)
Largest Moon: Ganymede (Diameter 5,262 km)
Smallest Moon: S/2003 J 9 and S/2003 J 12 (Diameter 1 km)
Greatest Planetary Gravity: Jupiter (20.87 m/s2)
Greatest Planetary Density: Earth (5.515 g/cm3)
Greatest Planetary Mass: Jupiter (1.8987 x 1027 kg)
Greatest Planetary Volume: Jupiter (1.4255 x 1015 km3)
Lowest Planetary Gravity: Mars (3.693 m/s2)
Lowest Planetary Density: Saturn (0.7 g/cm3)
Lowest Planetary Mass: Mercury (3.3022 x 1023 kg)
Lowest Planetary Volume: Mercury (6.08272 x 1010 km3)
Smallest Planet: Mercury (Diameter 4,879 km)
Largest Moon: Ganymede (Diameter 5,262 km)
Smallest Moon: S/2003 J 9 and S/2003 J 12 (Diameter 1 km)
Greatest Planetary Gravity: Jupiter (20.87 m/s2)
Greatest Planetary Density: Earth (5.515 g/cm3)
Greatest Planetary Mass: Jupiter (1.8987 x 1027 kg)
Greatest Planetary Volume: Jupiter (1.4255 x 1015 km3)
Lowest Planetary Gravity: Mars (3.693 m/s2)
Lowest Planetary Density: Saturn (0.7 g/cm3)
Lowest Planetary Mass: Mercury (3.3022 x 1023 kg)
Lowest Planetary Volume: Mercury (6.08272 x 1010 km3)
Solar System Images
Our Sun

Surface of Mars

Ice Moon Europa

Jupiter's Red Spot

Saturn's Rings

Surface of Titan (Artist's Impression)
