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jupiter, uranus
Black holes would normally be heavier than the solar system, but they would occupy less space, being extremely dense.
That is the planet Saturn.
yes we just don't know where it is
FAR less. Of all the mass in the solar system, the Sun is 99.5% of it. All the rest - Jupiter included - is one half of one percent of the solar system's mass.
In the inner solar system, at distances of less than 5 AU from the Sun.
Earth is more than 5 times denser than water. Of all the planets in the solar system, only Saturn is less dense than water.
No, the only planet in the solar system less dense than water is Saturn.
jupiter, uranus
Black holes would normally be heavier than the solar system, but they would occupy less space, being extremely dense.
Much less than 1 percent.
That is the planet Saturn.
Saturn. It is the only planet in the solar system that is less dense than water.
yes we just don't know where it is
Our sun is not bigger than the solar system. The sun is a star, and it contains over 99.9% of the mass of the solar system, but the solar system is much bigger than the sun.
FAR less. Of all the mass in the solar system, the Sun is 99.5% of it. All the rest - Jupiter included - is one half of one percent of the solar system's mass.
The solar system is much larger than the earth. I mean most planets are bigger than earth, that are in the solar system