Have you ever looked up into the infinite night sky and wondered what exactly lies beyond the vision of our naked eyes? Well, a whole host of fascinating objects spin in outer space waiting to be discovered. Fasten your seat belts and imagine for a moment that we can leave our mother Earth behind and explore the Solar System that surrounds it, we call it the Solar System because everything in it is centered around Sun and solar means something to do with the Sun. Our Solar System along with the Sun consists of 8 planets namely Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus. Along with the planets our Solar System consists of Asteroid Belt, Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud. Let’s know a little more about each of these starting from our star the mighty Sun.
Our Sun is a star just like millions of other stars that we can see in the night sky, just many times closer to us. Although the Sun is closest star to us, it is still very very far away from the Earth which is almost 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers away and that is why it looks so small even though it is the biggest object in the Solar System, in fact the Sun makes up more than 99% of the mass in the Solar System. If you put all of the planets, moons, asteroids and everything else in the Solar System together they would make up less than one quarter of a percent of it.
The Sun is so big that it is more than 100 times wider than Earth and we can fit more than a million Earths into it, more than that the Sun is what that holds the Solar System together, its incredible gravitational pull is what keeps the Earth and all the other planets circling around it instead of drifting off into space. The Sun is also what allows us to live on Earth, without the Sun there would be no heat, there would be no light, plants could not grow, water would freeze and nothing can survive.
Mercury compared to Earth |
As we move away from the Sun the first planet that we will encounter is Mercury and it is the closest planet to the Sun at a distance of 36 million miles (58 million kilometers). Mercury is the smallest planet in the Solar System much smaller than the Earth and one of only 5 planets that we can see from the Earth using nothing but our naked eyes, off course it wont look much like a planet it looks more like a bright star when seen from the Earth. Mercury is a lot like our moon, it is small and has a rocky surface with crators on it.
Mercury in the night sky |
Venus compared to the Earth |
The second closest planet to the Sun is Venus at a distance of 67 million miles (108 million kilometers) and it takes 255 Earth days to orbit around the Sun. Venus is often called as Earth’s sister because the two planets are very close in size and gravity but they are very different on the surface. first of all it is very hot, Venus is the hottest planet in the Solar System even though it is not the closest planet to the Sun which is Mercury.
Venus in the night sky |
Mars compared to Earth |
Mars is smaller than the Venus and Earth but larger than Mercury. It is cold and rocky with a thin atmosphere made of carbon dioxide and oxygen. There is water ice on Mars, scientists are very interested in Mars because they think that humans could live there with the help of some special equipments. Rockets and probes have already been sent there to gain more information about the planet. Right now there are two special robots namely Curiosity and Opportunity rovers exploring surface of the Mars and sending information back to earth. Mars has two moons, although they are not big and round like our moon. Mars’s moons are small and irregular, scientists think they may be captured asteroids from the asteroid belt which exist between Mars and Jupiter. To know more about Mars click here.
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun at a distance of 484 million miles (778 million kilometers) and it takes 12 earth years to orbit around the Sun. Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System and it is a Gas Giant. Planets are called gas giants which are massive and made of gases.
Jupiter compared to Earth |
Jupiter is so huge that we can fit almost 11 earths across its diameter. Jupiter is also the third brightest object in the night sky, only our moon and Venus are brighter. Jupiter has 79 moons which are discovered so far that orbit around it but 55 of them are very small, only about as big as mountain or smaller. Some of its moons are very large and at least two of them are about the same size as the planet Mercury. One of its moon is the largest moon in the solar system which is Ganymede. Some of these large moons can be seen from the Earth with the help of telescope.
The Great Red Spot |
We cannot land on Jupiter because it is made of gas and there is no ground to land on. Even if there was somewhere to land, Jupiter is covered by terrible storms which are many times stronger than even the strongest storms that can form on earth. One storm that we know about can be seen from the Earth and we call it The Great Red Spot because that is what it looks like and it has been going on from at least more than 200 years. To know more about Jupiter click here.
Saturn also has more than 60 moons orbiting around it, some moons are as big as planet Mercury and many. smaller. Something very interesting about Saturn is that, even though it is very large it is not very dense, that means if we could find a bath tub large enough to fit Saturn in it, the Saturn will float on the water instead of sinking. Saturn is the farthest planet that can be seen from the earth without the help of any telescope. To know more about Saturn click here.
Uranus compared to Earth |
Neptune compared to Earth |
OORT CLOUD