No, there is not.
No, there is not.
The smallest planet is Mercury with a diameter of about 4,880 kilometers, while the largest is Jupiter with a diameter of about 139,820 kilometers. Therefore, the diameter difference between the smallest and largest planet is approximately 135,940 kilometers.
The relationship between the planet's SPEED and its distance from the Sun is given by Kepler's Third Law.From there, it is fairly easy to derive a relationship between the period of revolution, and the distance.
The thinner the atmosphere, the more craters the planet has. Planets with thicker atmospheres burn up most asteroids before they hit the ground.
It is like sphere, but "flattened" at the poles. So the diameter at the equator is about 10% more than the diameter between the poles.
Saturn's moon Titan is larger and Jupiter's moon Callisto is smaller.
The planet Uranus.
The planet you are referring to is Jupiter, which has a diameter of approximately 86,881 miles. Mercury has a diameter of about 3,032 miles, Venus has a diameter of about 7,521 miles, Earth has a diameter of about 7,917 miles, and Mars has a diameter of about 4,212 miles.
the Jupiter diameter is 142,984km
Jupiter is the largest with the largest diameter.
That's very small for a planet!Planets have diameters measured in thousands of kilometers. I think you may have used the wrong number.
Uranus is third largest. Diameter = 51115km, about 8 times that of Earths diameter.