(See notes following tables.)
| planet or object | type | average distance from Sun (Earth=1) | orbital period (d)ays or (y)ears | diameter (Earth=1) | average surface temperature Celsius | structure | atmosphere | surface | known moons |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Sun) | star | -- | -- | 109 | 5600° (sunspots 3500°) | H and He plasma, fusion reactions in core, corona and solar wind above surface | 9 planets, 329,000 asteroids, 1,100 TNOs, 2,900 comets | ||
| Mercury | terrestrial | 0.4 | 90 d | 0.38 | 180° (430° to -170°) | rock, metal core | none | craters | none |
| Venus | terrestrial | 0.7 | 220 d | 0.95 | 460° | rock, metal core | thick, CO2, some N2 | plains, volcanic features, covered by clouds | none |
| Earth | terrestrial | 1.0 | 1.0 y | 1.0 | 10° (40° to -20°) | rock, metal core | N2, O2 | water oceans, varied geologic activity on land, life | 1 large |
| Mars | terrestrial | 1.5 | 1.9 y | 0.53 | -45° (-100° to 0°) | rock, metal core | thin, CO2, some N2 | craters, plains, volcanoes, canyons, polar caps | 2 small |
| Jupiter | jovian | 5 | 12 y | 12 | -120° (cloudtops) | mostly liquid metallic hydrogen, atmosphere, rock core | thick, H2, He | cloudtops: cloud bands, circular storms | 63 (4 large); faint rings |
| Saturn | jovian | 10 | 30 y | 9 | -155° (cloudtops) | liquid hydrogen, atmosphere, rock/ice core | thick, H2, He | cloudtops: cloud bands, haze | 51 (1 large, 6 medium); rings |
| Uranus | jovian | 19 | 80 y | 4 | -200° (cloudtops) | atmosphere, ice, rock core | thick, H2, He, CH4 | cloudtops: clouds, haze | 27 (5 medium); narrow rings |
| Neptune | jovian | 30 | 160 y | 4 | -205° (cloudtops) | atmosphere, ice, rock core | thick, H2, He, CH4 | cloudtops: cloud bands, storms | 13 (1 large); narrow rings |
| Pluto* | TNO | 39 (range 30-49) | 250 y | 0.18 | -230° | various ices, rock core | thin, N2, CH4, CO | various ices | 3 (1 medium, 2 small) |
| 2003 UB313* | TNO | 68 (range 38-98) | 560 y | 0.24 | -245°? | various ices, rock core? | ? | various ices? | 1 small |
Note: officially, Pluto is still classified as a planet and 2003 UB313 is counted among minor planet/trans-Neptunian objects; whether 2003 UB313 will be officially designated a planet is still undecided.
| moon | primary planet | average distance from center of planet | orbital period (d)ays | diameter (Earth=1) | average surface temperature Celsius | structure | atmosphere | surface |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moon | Earth | 380,000 km | 27 d | 0.27 | 100° to -170° | rock/metal | none | craters, lava plains |
| Io | Jupiter | 400,000 km | 2 d | 0.28 | 0° to -190° | rock, metal core | none | volcanoes, volcanic runoff |
| Europa | Jupiter | 700,000 km | 4 d | 0.25 | -150° to -190° | rock/metal, ice crust over a water ocean | none | ice, frozen fractures |
| Ganymede | Jupiter | 1,100,000 km | 7 d | 0.41 | -130° to -190° | ice, rock core | none | dirty ice plains, craters, ridges |
| Callisto | Jupiter | 1,900,000 km | 17 d | 0.38 | -130° to -190° | rock, ice | none | craters, ice and dirt |
| Titan | Saturn | 1,200,000 km | 16 d | 0.40 | -140° to -190° | rock, ices | N2, CH4 | various ices, methane sludge?, covered by haze |
| Triton | Neptune | 350,000 km | 6 d | 0.18 | -230° | rock, ices | N2, CH4 | plains of various ices, craters, geysers |
These tables are intentionally simplified to give a quick overview of planetary characteristics--you should not prefer this data over more precise or up-to-date data from other sources. More data, and more precise data, are available from many sources such as the National Space Science Data Center at http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/. Date of this data: May 2006.
The jovian planets do not have accessible surfaces, so information at their cloudtops is substituted for "surface" data. The Earth-Sun average distance is 150,000,000 kilometers (km); Earth's diameter is 12,700 km. "TNO" is trans-Neptunian object. "Ice" refers to water ice, "ices" may include other ices: nitrogen, methane, ammonia. For size of moons, "large" refers to planet-sized (over 2,000 km diameter) and "medium" to those between 350 and 2,000 km in diameter. In addition to the known moons of planets, there are 71 known moons of asteroids and 25 known moons of trans-Neptunian objects.
The chemical symbols used are for methane (CH4), carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), hydrogen (H), molecular hydrogen (H2), helium (He), nitrogen (N2), oxygen (O2).
Last modified 29 May 2006.
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