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Difference between inner and outer planets

inner and outer planets

Our solar system consists of many planets, one of which is Earth. The total number of planets is eight although there have been disagreements to this statement with some saying there are more than eight (the opponents of the theory that Pluto is not a planet). Whatever the case, when we talk about planets we divide them into two groups; inner planets and outer planets. This classification is relative to the planets’ position with respect to the Sun. The eight planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. We shall now make clear which of these are inner planets and which are outer planets and what actually differentiates them.

Inner planets are those planets which are closest to the sun and include the first four planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) in order of increasing distance from the Sun. Mercury is the closest, followed by Venus, Earth and then Mars. Outer planets are those which are further away from the Sun and include the next four planets in order of increasing distance from the Sun (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune), with Neptune being the furthest.

The inner planets are made up of rock and metal and are therefore solid. These planets move slowly as they are considered to be heavy. They have an average diameter of about 13000 km as they are small planets. On the other hand, the outer planets are said to be made of gases and they are not really solid. The gases which make them up are Hydrogen and Helium; huge balloons floating in the space are considered as giant gas planets by people and they have an average diameter of about 48000 km.

Furthermore, the inner planets are warmer than outer planets simply due to the fact that they are closer to the Sun. Outer planets are composed of lighter elements such as gases and inner planets are composed of heavy elements such as iron. Inner planets have fewer moons, small, silicate surface, nickel-iron core, higher density and rotate more slowly compared to outer planets. Outer planets have a greater number of moons, no solid part; rotate faster, have a lower density as well as rings in some cases (Jupiter and Saturn). Outer planets are significantly bigger than the inner planets as Jupiter is measured to be 88846 miles in diameter and Mercury is measured to be 3031 miles in diameter.

There is significant difference between the rotation and the orbit of the two types of planets. For example, for Jupiter it would take 9 hours and 55 minutes for a day to complete (or to complete one rotation) and on Venus it would take 234 hours for a day to complete. (The time period of a day is that compared to the standard 24 hour day on Earth.) The inner planets take lesser time to orbit the Sun whereas the planets which are far away need more time as they have to cover more ground. For example, Jupiter takes 164 Earth years to complete one orbit!

Summary

    1. Inner planets are those which are closer to the Sun (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) and outer planets are those which are further from the Sun (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune)

 

    1. Inner planets have an average diameter of about 13000 km, they move slowly as they are heavier-being made up of metals and rock; outer planets have an average diameter of about 48000 km and are made of hydrogen and helium gases, therefore they move faster due to lesser weight

 

    1. Inner planets are warmer due to lesser distance from the Sun

 

    1. Inner planets have fewer moons, small, silicate surface, nickel-iron core, higher density and rotate slowly compared to Outer planets which have greater number of moons, faster rotation, no solid part, lower density and rings (in the case of Jupiter and Saturn)

 

    1. Outer planets are significantly bigger than the inner planets; Jupiter is measured to be 88846 miles in diameter and Mercury is measured to be 3031 miles in diameter

 

    1. Outer planets spin faster than inner planets which spin slowly

 

  1. For the inner planets it takes lesser time to complete an orbit around the Sun whereas outer planets take greater time due to their greater distance from the Sun

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4 Comments

  1. HEY! You need to change the word lesser because it is NOT a word! If you don’t change it you will teach children poor English. Totally insane.

  2. For the inner planets it takes lesser time to complete an orbit around the Sun whereas outer planets take greater time due to their greater distance from the Sun

  3. There are a few flaws. Venus takes 243 Earth days (5,832 hours) to complete a rotation, not 243 hours, and Jupiter takes 11.88 Earth years to complete an orbit, not 164 years. I think you got mixed up because Neptune takes 164 years to orbit the sun. And yes, the inner planets are much warmer than the outer planets, Mercury at night, is FREEZING!!! It’s -290 Fahrenheit (179 Celsius). That’s colder than Jupiter’s temperature (-238 Fahrenheit or -150 Celsius) and Saturn’s temperature (-285 Fahrenheit or -176 Celsius).

  4. Please, correct this error.
    Article states “Jupiter takes 164 Earth years to complete one orbit!”
    In fact Jupiter takes about 12 years to orbit the sun.

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