Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Our Nearest Planet
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There was an interesting piece on Radio 4's excellent More or Less programme last week about which planet is our nearest neighbour. If you didn't hear the programme I'd be interested to know what people think the 'answer' was. Actually it does depend how you frame the question but it did make me think about how we visualise the solar system
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Good point, OG- okay I meant nearest planet to earth.
Yes it varies depending on where they lie - Venus gets closest but sometimes it's Mars and sometimes Mercury- in fact it's Mercury that is closest on average. If you take a snapshot at points in time it is Mercury that is closest most often in terms of distance from Earth
Yes it varies depending on where they lie - Venus gets closest but sometimes it's Mars and sometimes Mercury- in fact it's Mercury that is closest on average. If you take a snapshot at points in time it is Mercury that is closest most often in terms of distance from Earth
"Mercury is on average the closest planet to the Earth: it is closest to Earth 46% of the time; Venus is closest 36% of the time, while Mars is closest just 18% of the time."
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Mercu ry_(pla net)
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Thanks jno. I'd have said Venus or sometimes Mars but once you hear the answer and/or explanation for Mercury it makes sense. It comes from seeing all those diagrams with the planets all lined up ina straight line from Mercury to Neptune (or Pluto for us oldies).
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /progra mmes/p0 6xvkjc
https:/
Can any one here (cough, cough, JIM) explain to me the following?
When we see visual representations of the planets orbiting the sun, (on a poster for instance) they all appear on the same line. Like they are all orbiting the suns equator. Wouldn't they (in reality) be orbiting in all different directions. Some horizontal, some vertical, some diagonally , some north to south, others east to west etc?
Always been curious about this. Thanks.
When we see visual representations of the planets orbiting the sun, (on a poster for instance) they all appear on the same line. Like they are all orbiting the suns equator. Wouldn't they (in reality) be orbiting in all different directions. Some horizontal, some vertical, some diagonally , some north to south, others east to west etc?
Always been curious about this. Thanks.
All planets are more or less orbiting in the same plane, and all of them go anticlockwise round the Sun, so there is in fact some regularity. The smaller objects aren't quite so reliable.
The reason for this is that the planets will have been formed from material that collected into a disc (rather than just some blob).
The reason for this is that the planets will have been formed from material that collected into a disc (rather than just some blob).
Yes, the planets do orbit the sun in near enough the same plane. Here's an explanation why:
https:/ /www.ph yslink. com/edu cation/ askexpe rts/ae5 88.cfm
https:/