Mission 3: Research about The Planets, make notes in your notebook and plan a description about your favourite planet.
The Planets
The nine planets that orbit the sun are (in order from the Sun): Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter (the biggest planet in our Solar System), Saturn (with large, orbiting rings), Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto (a dwarf planet or plutoid). A belt of asteroids (minor planets made of rock and metal) orbits between Mars and Jupiter. These objects all orbit the sun in roughly circular orbits that lie in the same plane, the ecliptic (Pluto is an exception; this dwarf planet has an elliptical orbit tilted over 17° from the ecliptic).The inner planets (those planets that orbit close to the Sun) are quite different from the outer planets (those planets that orbit far from the Sun).
- The inner planets are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. They are relatively small, composed mostly of rock, and have few or no moons.
- The outer planets include: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. They are mostly huge, mostly gaseous, ringed, and have many moons (plus Pluto, which is a dwarf planet that has one large moon and two small moons).
Mercury
The planet Mercury is the closest of the planets
to the Sun. Because this planet lies so close to the Sun, and as a
result somewhat near to Earth, it is visible to observers on Earth in
the late evening or early morning sky. Because of this, Mercury has
become a part of the mythology and legend of almost every culture
throughout the history of the Earth.
This
planet is often called a morning star. This is because Mercury shines
brightly in the early morning just before the sun rises. It has also
been called an evening star for the same reason. Mercury is often
visible for a brief period of time just after the Sun sets. Click here to find out more facts about Mercury
Venus
The planet Venus has long been one of the most
misunderstood of all the inner planets. Like the Earth, Venus has an
atmosphere. However, Venus' atmosphere is far thicker than that of the
Earth, making it difficult for modern science to penetrate.
Interestingly, scientists have recently been able to peek through the
thick clouds and get a few glimpses of the surface. There are numerous
volcanoes and many mountains that appear misshapen.
There
is much we still do not know about how this planet looks and what it is
like. However, using special instruments and probes scientists have in
recent years unlocked many of the secrets long hidden by this mysterious
world. In the 1970s, the Soviet Union actually was able to land more
than one probe on the surface of Venus. These scientific probes only
lasted a few hours before they were destroyed by the intense heat of the
planet. These probes were able to take several pictures and send them
back to earth for scientists to study. Click here to find out more facts about Venus
Earth
The Earth is the biggest of all the terrestrial
planets. A terrestrial planet is a dense planet found in the inner
Solar System. The diameter of Earth is 7,926 miles. The circumference
measured around the equator is 24,901 miles. There are currently almost 7
billion people living on the Earth. About 30% of the Earth's surface
is covered with land, while about 70% is covered by oceans.Click here to find out more facts about Earth
Mars
Mars excites scientists because its mild
temperament is more like the Earth's than any of the other planets.
Evidence suggests that Mars once had rivers, streams, lakes, and even an
ocean. As Mars' atmosphere slowly depleted into outer space, the
surface water began to permanently evaporate. Today the only water on
Mars in either frozen in the polar caps or underground.
You may sometimes hear Mars referred to as the "Red
Planet." This is because the surface of Mars is red. If you stood on
the surface of Mars, you would see red dirt and rocks everywhere. Click here to find out more about Mars.
Jupiter
Jupiter is by far the largest planet in our Solar System. The Earth could fit inside Jupiter more than 1000 times.
Jupiter
is a very stormy planet. There are storms found throughout the
atmosphere, and most of the storms seem to never end. The many
different cloud formations and storms in the atmosphere also make
Jupiter a very colorful planet.
Jupiter's
great red spot, visible in the picture above to the right, is where a
giant storm has been raging for at least 300 years. This red spot is
also called "The Eye of Jupiter" because of its shape. This storm's
super hurricane winds blow across an area larger than the Earth.
Jupiter
is considered a gas giant because it does not have a solid surface.
Under its atmosphere is a large liquid ocean of hydrogen and water.
What lies in between that ocean and the atmosphere? Actually, there is
no in between. The atmosphere slowly gets thicker and thicker until it
becomes part of the ocean. In other words, Jupiter's ocean has no
surface on which you could float a boat. The sky becomes the ocean. Click here to find out more about Jupiter
Saturn
In many ways, Saturn is similar to Jupiter, but
it is much smaller. It is the second largest planet in our Solar System
and it is a gas giant like Jupiter. Under the clouds of methane,
hydrogen and helium, the sky gradually turns into liquid until it
becomes a giant ocean of liquid chemicals.
Saturn
is the least dense planet in our Solar System. It is made up of mostly
hydrogen and helium, which are the two lightest elements in the
universe and thus make Saturn the lightest planet that we know of. This
is why you wouldn't weigh as much on Saturn as you think you would
because of its size. And because Saturn is so light, it does not have
as much gravity. Interestingly, it is believed Saturn would actually be
able to float in water because the hydrogen and helium that make up the
planet are so lightweight.
Because
Saturn is such a lightweight planet and it spins so fast, Saturn is not
perfectly round like most of the other planets. Like Jupiter, Saturn
is wider in the middle and more narrow near its top and bottom. Click here to find out more about Saturn
Uranus
Like Jupiter and Saturn, Uranus is a gas giant.
But Uranus is a little different. Unlike all the other planets and most
of the moons in our Solar System, Uranus spins on its side. It is
believed that long ago a very large object smashed into this planet.
The crash was so powerful that it completely changed the direction of
Uranus' planetary rotation. However, a more recent theory is that the
extreme tilt of Uranus' axis may have been caused by a large moon that
was slowly pulled away from the planet by another large planet long ago
when our Solar System was still new. It is thought that the
gravitational pull of this moon moving away from Uranus may have caused
it to tilt on its side.
Like
Saturn, the thick atmosphere of Uranus is made up of methane, hydrogen
and helium. But Uranus is an extremely cold planet. It has been called
the "ice giant." It is believed that Uranus is made up of rock and ice
and has a large rocky core. Because of the tremendous planetary
pressure of Uranus, there could possibly be trillions of large diamonds
in or on the surface of this planet.
Scientists
also believe that on the surface of Uranus there may be a huge ocean.
And, interestingly, it is thought that the temperature of this ocean may
be extremely hot, maybe even as hot as 5000 degrees Fahrenheit (2760
Celsius). Click here to find out more about Uranus
Neptune
For many, centuries people did not know that this
planet even existed. It was discovered by Johann Galle and Heinrich
D'Arrest in 1846.
Neptune is the smallest of the four gas giants in
our Solar System. Much like Saturn and Uranus, Neptune's atmosphere
contains hydrogen, helium and methane.
Not
much was known about Neptune until it was visited by the spacecraft
Voyager 2 on August 25, 1989. Voyager 2 took many pictures of the
planet, and much of what we know today about Neptune came from this
single visit. These pictures show a brilliant blue planet with a few
thin white clouds laced around its surface.
In
Neptune's atmosphere, there is a large white cloud that moves around
rather quickly. The "scooting" of this cloud around the atmosphere has
led it to be named "Scooter."
When
Voyager 2 visited Neptune, its pictures showed a giant storm much like
the storm on Jupiter. This storm is called the "Great Dark Spot"
because it appears as a dark oval shape on the surface of the planet.
We do not know how long this storm has been active or if it is still
present. More recently, the Hubble Space Telescope sent pictures back
to Earth and there was no sign of the Great Dark Spot. These pictures
did show two other dark spots that eventually faded away.
Neptune
is a very windy place. No other planet in the Solar System has winds
that are as strong as Neptune's. The winds near the Great Dark Spot
were believed to have reached nearly 1,200 miles per hour (approx 1931
km per hour). Perhaps this extremely windy atmosphere contributes to
the appearance and disappearance of the great dark spots. Click here to find out more about Neptune

The Hubble Space Telescope has provided the clearest images yet of this dwarf planet for scientists to study. Studies of Pluto and its moon are still being conducted today with the Hubble Space Telescope. However, little is still known about Pluto and its moons because it is so far away. Click here to find out more about Pluto
Pluto
The Dwarf Planet
Pluto
was the only planet to be named by a kid. After the planet was
discovered in 1930, an 11-year-old girl who lived in Oxford, England, by
the name of Venetia Burney, suggested that this new planet needed to be
named after the Roman god of the underworld. Venetia's grandfather
sent this suggestion to the Lowell Observatory and the name was
accepted.
Pluto
is smaller than 7 of the moons in the Solar System. It is about
two-thirds smaller than Earth's moon. Because it is so small, many
scientists don't consider it a planet at all. In 1999, a group of
scientists attempted to re-classify Pluto as a comet. On August 24,
2006, Pluto's status was officially changed from planet to dwarf planet.
For decades, children have been taught in school that there are nine
planets in our Solar System. However, with this change, there are now
only eight planets. Also because of this change, there is a new
category of small planets known as plutoids.
Read a story about how we discover planets today!
Click on the book below.

The Hubble Space Telescope has provided the clearest images yet of this dwarf planet for scientists to study. Studies of Pluto and its moon are still being conducted today with the Hubble Space Telescope. However, little is still known about Pluto and its moons because it is so far away. Click here to find out more about Pluto
The Planets workbook
Description planner
Information taken from enchanted learning.com