KOI-314c, with a mass equal to the Earth, is the smallest known Gas Planet. Even though its mass is equal to that of the Earth, its is 60% larger and has a density that indicates a thick gas envelope
As far as is known, at this time (January 2014) onions have not been genetically modified, so Green Giant onions would not be GMO.
It's viral, and it's also the smallest virus known to man so far.
England has the smallest constitution, in so far that it has NO constitution.
The adverb idiom thus far (so far, until now) can appear wherever it sounds reasonable in relation to the modified verb or adjective."The prototype has been found to be completely useless thus far.""Thus far, there is no cause for alarm.""Life as we know it has thus far not been found on any other planet."("Life as we know it has not been found, thus far, on any other planet.")
("thus far" has the same idiomatic meaning as so far or until now)"We have not had any problems with the program thus far.""Thus far, we have observed no life on other planets."
Mercury.
The question is difficult to answer since new animals of different sizes are born day to day.However,smallest known mammal is Indonesian bumble bee bat(Craseonycteris thonglongya),and the smallest reptile is dwarf gecko.
I'm not exactly sure but it's probably: electrons, neutrons, and protons.The electron is the smallest particle of the atom, in the traditional sense. However, the neutrino is far smaller than the electron, and is thus the smallest particle. You could also argue that the photon, with zero rest mass, is actually the smallest, but that's a quantum mechanics question that seems to be beyond the scope of this question.
Paedophryne amanuensis thus far is the world's smallest frog.Specifically, the frog is native to Papua New Guinea, where it lives among rainforest leaf litter. It measures 0.30 inches (7.7 millimeters). Its calls sound insect-like.
The duration of The Week Thus Far is 1800.0 seconds.
As far as we know, it's Mercury. If there's a closer planet, it hasn't been discovered yet.
Yes. Even the smallest star is many times larger than Earth. Earth is a bit more than 12,000 kilometers across. A red giant star is far larger with a diameter of 20 to 100 million kilometers (20,000,000 to 100,000,000).