well no one knows because no one has ever been on any other planet
In 1853 Vesta, Juno, Ceres and Pallas were demoted from planets to minor planets, and in 2006 Pluto was demoted from planet to dwarf planet.
6:venus,mars,jupiter,neptune,saturn,and(hehe)uranus. BWAHAHA! sorry, uranus sounds funny. oopsy...
Though Planet M sounds like the name of an actual planet, it is not. There are many different Planet M's including an Indian music store and a file sharing site. These are both located on Earth.
There is a region in between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter that, some scientists believed, ought to contain a planet. Early astronomers started looking for a planet in that gap, and found instead tens of thousands of small bodies that they called "little star-like thing". It sounds better in Latin; "Asteroid". So the area between Mars and Jupiter is sometimes called the "asteroid belt".
it mean inside the planet No, it means 'within the orbits of the planets' as in 'interplenetary travel' - travelling between planets. Well Google says it means "In or between planets;"interplanetary travel"
In my humble opinion, I like Jupiter better because the phrase "Jumping Jupiter" sounds better than "Jumping Saturn".
Asteroid belt is the region in the solar system located between the orbits of planets Mars and Jupiter . this region is accompanied by the numerous irregular shaped asteroids and minor objects .
That sounds like a humorous sentence using a mnemonic to help remember the order of the planets in our solar system. The sentence could represent: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto.
Go looking on other planets. ...Every planet ...in every solar system ...in every galaxy Then we'd be sure if they really exist. Yeah, sounds easy enough.
The definition of a 'planet' is not as simple as it sounds. The discovery of the new planet about 80 years ago produced a lot of excitement in the public and in scientific circles. As more information has come to light regarding Pluto, it is clear that Pluto is not completely like the bigger planets. Pluto's mass is far smaller than any other planet (1/400 of earth's mass). In 2006, the International Astronomical Union published guidelines for planets, minor planets, and Kuiper Belt objects. It was this definition that excluded Pluto. If Pluto were included as a planet, it would be necessary to add 2 or 3 other objects (Eris, Ceres, possibly others) also as planets. In 2008 and 2009, scientists and astronomers met to discuss Pluto's classification. No consensus could be reached, but the attendees seem to have acquiesced to the IAU by describing Pluto as a Plutoid Trans-Neptunian Kuiper Belt object.
I think it sounds like Phantom Planet-California
Uranium, Neptunium, Plutonium