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14 Space


WHAT ARE THE MAIN BODIES IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM?
The Earth is one of eight. PLANETS in the Solar System. Most planets
have natural satellites (moons) circling them. Swarms of mini-planets, called
asteroids, also travel in the Solar System, and much farther out are icy lumps
that grow shining tails and become comets when they near the Sun.

Our local star, the Sun, and everything that circles around it, is known as the


Solar System. The Sun is the largest and most powerful body in this region


of space, occupying more than 99.8 per cent of the Solar System’s entire mass.


Its immense gravity holds planets, asteroids, comets, dust, and other bodies


in oval paths, or orbits, around it. This gravity is so powerful that some objects


are in orbits trillions (thousands of billions) of kilometres out from the Sun.


HOW DID THE SOLAR SYSTEM FORM?
The Sun and planets were born in a huge cloud of cold, swirling gas, called the
solar nebula. The cloud collapsed under its own gravity into a fast-spinning,
ball-shaped mass. The centre part became denser and hotter and eventually began
shining brightly as the Sun. Rocks, dust, and gases circling in a disc around the
Sun began lumping together, eventually forming the planets.

A planet is a world that orbits a star. There
are eight major planets going around the
Sun – Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter,
Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Dwarf planets
are similar to major planets but smaller.
Astronomers now class Pluto as a dwarf
planet rather than a major planet.

WHAT ARE PLANETS MADE OF?
The four planets closest to the Sun are largely made
up of rock, like the Earth, and are called the terrestrial
(Earth-like) planets. The next four larger planets, often
called gas giants, are made mainly from hydrogen
and helium. The dwarf planets beyond Neptune,
such as Pluto, are made of ice and rock.

FIND OUT MORE. Earth 16 • Jupiter 19 • Mars 19 • Mercury 18 • Neptune 21 • Saturn 20 • Uranus 20 • Venus 18 • Dwarf Planets 21


2 CIRCLING THE SUN
Eight major planets travel round
the Sun in huge elliptical (oval)
orbits. The four inner planets
(nearest the Sun) are much hotter,
faster, and closer together than
the four outer planets. The orbits
all lie in roughly the same plane,
or level, in space.

4 PLANET FORMATION
Gas giant planets such as Jupiter
formed in the outer reaches of
the Solar System, where the Sun’s
gravity is weaker, space is colder,
and there were large amounts of
ice and gas. This picture shows
a gas giant just beginning to
form (at the right).

1 GIANT PLANET
Jupiter is mainly hydrogen and helium. Below the
cloudy atmosphere, the pressure is so great that
these gases turn into a great liquid ocean.

1 ROCKY PLANET
A rocky planet, such as Mars, has a thin crust
made up of hard rock. Underneath is another
rocky layer called the mantle. A huge mass of
iron makes up the centre, or core.

PLANETS


Liquid
metallic
hydrogen

Hydrogen
and helium
atmosphere

Liquid
hydrogen
and helium

Hard,
rocky crust

Possible
solid core Heavy
iron core

Rocky
mantle

Mars Venus Mercury Earth

Neptune

Sun

Uranus

Saturn

Jupiter

SOLAR SYSTEM


Solar System


Solar
System
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