Table of Contents
What planet can fit all the planets?
You Could Fit All the Planets Between the Earth and the Moon
Planet | Average Diameter (km) |
---|---|
Mars | 6,771 |
Jupiter | 139,822 |
Saturn | 116,464 |
Uranus | 50,724 |
Can you fit all the planets between Earth?
NO, planets of our solar system, with or without Pluto, cannot fit within the mean lunar distance. An additional 3,500 km is needed to squeeze in Neptune (5,900 km to include Pluto). Supermoon fans know that the distance between the Earth and the Moon varies.
Can you fit all the planets in the sun?
It’s often hard to fully grasp just how big the planets in the solar system are. 1.3 million Earths could fit in the Sun, but that is hard to picture. The Sun is also to scale with the rest of the planets.
How many planets can fit?
How many planets can fit into the habitable zone around a star? A group of scientists saw this question posed by a non-scientist on Reddit and decided to answer it. The answer they came up with is five rocky planets the mass of Earth around a small, dim star (called a red dwarf).
Can you fit all the planets into Jupiter?
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system. Jupiter is so big that all the other planets in the solar system could fit inside it. More than 1,300 Earths would fit inside Jupiter.
How many Earths fit Mars?
Mars is actually smaller than the Earth! The radius of Mars is 3,389.5 km, which is just over half that of the Earth’s: 6,371 km. If you assume they’re both perfect spheres, this means that you can actually fit about 7 Mars’s inside Earth!
Can two planets be in the habitable zone?
“Even though (our solar system) only has one planet in the habitable zone, it’s not necessarily the typical situation. A far more typical scenario may be to have many planets in the habitable zone, depending on the presence of a giant planet.”
How many Earths can fit in Mars?
Are there any planets that can fit inside the Sun?
You can fit around more than 1,800 Neptune-sized planets inside the Sun. Let’s talk about a planet that no longer fits in, yes, the dwarf planet Pluto. Pluto is the ninth-largest planet in the Solar System, and though many don’t regard it as a planet anymore, we figured it deserves a spot here regardless.
Can a planet fit between the Earth and the Moon?
So you could accurately say ALL of the planets could fit between Earth and the Moon …including Pluto and Earth itself. Now like I said, we’re not including the size of Saturn’s rings in this imaginary (and quite impossible) lineup.
How many Earths could fit inside each of the other planets?
If you wanted to stack actual Earths inside the other planets, it would leave gaps and the calculation to work out how they stack becomes a bit harder. Also, for gas giants, where do you determine where space ends and they start? Jupiter has 1321.6 times the volume of the Earth.
Is it possible to line up all the planets in our Solar System?
It might seem a bit far-fetched but yes, it’s true: if you could line up all of the other planets in our Solar System in a row edge-to-edge (or more geometrically accurately, limb-to-limb) and for good measure even include Pluto, the entire queue would easily fit within the space between Earth and the Moon.