Well there are many different ways to look at it. If you are just talking about in iur solar system there are only two planets. Mars and Jupiter. Mars is totally red, and Jupiter is yellow, red, brown and white.
There were 6 known planets, Uranus and Neptune weren't discovered yet.
Yes because they are rocky planets and the outer planets are known as the gas planets.
Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars are known as "inner planets" or "terrestrial planets".
The terrestrial planets.
The planets Uranus and Neptune are known as the ice giants.
Mars is known as the Red Planet
The earth is a planet, it has no known planets within.
MercuryVenusEarthMarsJupiterSaturnUranus
The number of planets is not known. The number of stars is not known either, nor if all have planetary systems. Certainly many billions of billions.
It is not generally known how many planets are in each galaxy; it isn't even known how many planets are in our own galaxy, and will probably never be known exactly, due to its enormous size. However, according to latest observations, it seems likely that every star has several planets, at least on average.
Currently there are 353 known extrasolar planets (that is to say, outside of our solar system), but it is unknown how many planets exist in the universe.
There are more than 300 known stars with known planets, and the list gets longer all the time.
There were 6 known planets, Uranus and Neptune weren't discovered yet.
There are 464 extrasolar planets, and 8 planets within our Solar System. This makes a total of 470 known planets.
Yes because they are rocky planets and the outer planets are known as the gas planets.
The are probably many we haven't discovered yet. However currently there are five known dwarf planets.
The inner planets are known as terrestrial planets because they are rocky like earth