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Space Topics: Compare the Planets
Worlds of the Solar System
Our solar system contains roughly a hundred round worlds in a wide range
of sizes from gas giants like Jupiter to small rocky worlds like Mars to
iceballs like Enceladus. Take a tour of the sizes of bodies in the solar
system.
The Solar System at a Scale of 1,000 Kilometers Per Pixel
We begin at a very large scale, taking a distant view of the solar system.
This largest scale, of 1,000 kilometers (623 miles) pixel, is
the only one at which a tiny piece of the Sun can be fit onto the page.
The Sun is vastly more enormous than everything else in the solar system
put together. The gas giants Jupiter and Saturn and
ice giants Uranus and
Neptune dominate the rest of the worlds
of the solar system. The rest of the planets are just visible at this
scale. Earth, Venus, and Mars come in at 13, 12, and 7 pixels across, respectively.
But a few of the giant moons are visible: Jupiter's Ganymede and Saturn's
Titan are larger than the planet Mercury, and Jupiter's Callisto is just
about as big.
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| The Sun - 1,391,000 km diameter |
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Uranus
51,118 km |

Neptune
49,528 km |
Jupiter
142,984 km |
Saturn
120,536 km (main rings 273,550 km) |
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Earth
12,756 km |
Venus
12,104 km |
Mars
6,794 km |
Ganymede
5,262 km |
Titan
5,150 km |
Mercury
4,879 km |
Callisto
4,821 km |
Image credits: the Hubble
Space Telescope (Mars), NASA
GSFC (Earth, from Terra), the Cassini
imaging team (Jupiter, Saturn), Mark
Robinson (Mercury, from Mariner 10), Mattias Malmer (Venus, from Mariner
10), Calvin Hamilton (Titan, from Voyager), and Bill
Arnett (the Moon, from his own telescope). The rest are from the Planetary
Photojournal at NASA/JPL (Voyager, Galileo, and SOHO images).
Now let's zoom in by a factor of 10...
The Solar System at a Scale of 100 Kilometers Per Pixel
Zooming in by a factor of 10 gets us to the scale of the terrestrial planets
and the solar system's large moons. The gas and ice giants would be too
large to fit on the page at this scale. Earth and Venus are
now the standouts, both significantly larger than anything else visible
at this scale. Then the smallest planets mix in size with the largest moons: Mars is
followed closely in size by Jupiter's Ganymede and
Saturn's Titan, both
of which are larger than Mercury.
Next in size come Jupiter's Callisto and Io,
Earth's Moon, Jupiter's Europa,
and Neptune's Triton,
all of which are larger than Pluto.
A jump down in size takes you to the icy moons of the outer solar system:
Uranus' Titania, Saturn's Rhea,
Uranus' Oberon,
Saturn's Iapetus, Pluto's Charon,
Uranus' Umbriel and Ariel,
and Saturn's
Dione and Tethys.
Finally, just a bit smaller than these, comes the largest of all the asteroids, Ceres.
Several trans-Neptunian
objects would appear at this scale but are not
included because their sizes are uncertain and no images are available.
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 Mars
6,794 km |
 Ganymede
5,262 km |
 Titan
5,150 km |
Earth
12,756 km |
Venus
12,104 km |
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Europa
3,122 km |

Triton
2,707 km |

Pluto
2,390 km |
Mercury
4,879 km |
Callisto
4,821 km |
Io
3,643 km |
The Moon
3,476 km |
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Titania
1,578 km |
Rhea
1,528 km |
Oberon
1,523 km |
Iapetus
1,436 km |
Charon
1,186 km |
Umbriel
1,169 km |
Ariel
1,162 km |
Dione
1,162 km |
Tethys
1,162 km |
Ceres
960 km |
Image credits: the Hubble
Space Telescope (Mars), NASA
GSFC (Earth, from Terra), the Cassini
imaging team (Jupiter, Saturn and its moons), Marc
Buie, Lowell Observatory (Pluto and Charon, from Earth-based photometry), Mark
Robinson (Mercury, from Mariner 10), Ted
Stryk (Uranian and Neptunian moons, from Voyager images), Mattias Malmer
(Venus, from Mariner 10), A. Tayfun Öner (Triton, from Voyager), Calvin
Hamilton (Titan, from Voyager) and Bill
Arnett (the Moon, from his own telescope). The rest are from the Planetary
Photojournal at NASA/JPL (Voyager and Galileo images).
Zooming by another factor of 10...
The Solar System at a Scale of 10 Kilometers Per Pixel
Zooming in by a factor of 100 from the orginal view takes us to a scale
where the worlds of the solar system begin to deviate from spherical shapes,
where mountains and ridges clearly spike above their visible disks.
At this size, gravity (which tends to flatten mountains over time) is quite
weak, and often is not strong enough to overcome the inherent strength
of the rock and ice. At this scale, a spherical shape implies that something
happened in the little world's geologic history to heat its interior enough
to weaken or even melt the rock or ice and allow gravity to have its
way.
We begin with the tribe of sub-2,000-kilometer outer planet moons mentioned
above:
Titania, Rhea, Oberon, Iapetus, Charon, Umbriel, Ariel, Dione,
and Tethys.
Next up is the largest asteroid, Ceres.
Following Ceres there is a jump in size down to the next largest asteroids,
Pallas and Vesta.
Pallas is also the first world in this lineup that has not yet been visited
by a spacecraft or observed with a powerful enough telescope to produce
an image that resolves features on its disk. Lumpy Vesta is followed by
the surprisingly spherical moons Enceladus (Saturn)
and Miranda (Uranus).
Neptune's Proteus and
Saturn's Mimas are the
last of the bodies to achieve a basically spherical shape. The rest of
the moonlets and asteroids for which there are images are definitely lumpy.
Unfortunately, no disk-resolved images are available for many of the rest
of these bodies, so their shapes are not well known.
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Titania
1,578 km |
Rhea
1,528 km |
Oberon
1,523 km |
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Iapetus
1,436 km |
Charon
1,186 km |
Umbriel
1,169 km |
Ariel
1,162 km |
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--
Pallas
570 km |

Vesta
525 km |

Enceladus
512 km |
Dione
1,162 km |
Tethys
1,066 km |
Ceres
960 km |
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--
Nereid
340 km |

Amalthea
262x146 km |
--
Juno
240 km |
Miranda
480 km |
Proteus
440 km |
Mimas
418 km |
Hyperion
370x280 km |
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-- |
-- |
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-- |
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-- |
-- |
-- |
Phoebe
230x220 |
Eugenia
226 |
Kleopatra
217 |
Larissa
216x168 |
Galatea
204x184 |
Janus
194x190 |
Sycorax
190 |
Despina
180x148 |
Puck
162 |
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-- |
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-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
Prometheus
148x100 |
Epimetheus
138x110 |
Portia
136 |
Pandora
110x88 |
Thalassa
108x100 |
Siwa
103 |
Caliban
96 |
Naiad
96x60 |
Juliet
94 |
Image credits: the Hubble
Space Telescope (Ceres, Vesta), the Cassini
imaging team (Saturn's moons), Marc
Buie, Lowell Observatory (Charon, from Earth-based photometry), Ted
Stryk (Uranian and Neptunian moons, from Voyager images), The rest are
from the Planetary
Photojournal at NASA/JPL (Voyager images).
Juno, Eugenia, Kleopatra, and Siwa are asteroids. Amalthea is a moon
of Jupiter. Mimas, Hyperion, Phoebe, Janus, Prometheus, Epimetheus, and Pandora
are moons of Saturn. Miranda, Sycorax, Puck, Portia, and Caliban are moons
of Uranus. Proteus, Nereid, Karissa, Galatea, Despina, Thalassa, and Naiad
are moons of Neptune.
Images on this page come from a wide variety of
sources, including the Hubble
Space Telescope (Mars, Ceres, Vesta), NASA
GSFC (Earth, from Terra), the Cassini
imaging team (Jupiter, Saturn and its moons), Marc
Buie, Lowell Observatory (Pluto and Charon, from Earth-based
photometry), Mark
Robinson (Mercury, from Mariner 10), Ted
Stryk (Uranian and Neptunian moons, from Voyager images), Mattias
Malmer (Venus, from Mariner 10), A. Tayfun Öner
(Triton, from Voyager), Calvin Hamilton (Titan, from Voyager) and Bill
Arnett (the Moon, from his own telescope). The rest are from the
Planetary Photojournal at NASA/JPL (Voyager, Galileo, and SOHO images).
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