Atmospheres of the planets.
And the Sun, of course, is made of gas.
inner planets and gas giants
Early in the history of the solar system the heat and solar wind from the sun drove off most of the hydrogen, helium, and other volatile from the inner solar system, leaving behind objects made mostly of rock and metal. The gas giants in the outer solar system were far enough from the sun to escape this fate.
Early in the history of the solar system the heat and solar wind from the sun drove off most of the hydrogen, helium, and other volatile from the inner solar system, leaving behind objects made mostly of rock and metal. The gas giants in the outer solar system were far enough from the sun to escape this fate.
Bodies in the inner Solar System, like Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars, are predominantly made of rock and metals. In contrast, bodies in the outer Solar System, like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, are primarily composed of gases and ices, such as hydrogen, helium, water, and ammonia. Additionally, outer Solar System bodies are much larger and more massive compared to inner Solar System bodies.
In the inner solar system, the planets are rocky and it is possible to have water as a vapor or a liquid on the surface. In the outer solar system the planets are gas giants and water can only exist as ice.
Not in our solar system. The inner planets are smaller.
The inner system is Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. The inner system is all rocky planets because gas giants like Jupiter will "Melt" under that kind of temperature.
The two major parts of the solar system are the inner solar system, which includes the four inner terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) and the asteroid belt, and the outer solar system, which includes the gas giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) and the Kuiper Belt.
The two main parts of our solar system are the inner solar system, which includes the Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars, and the outer solar system, which includes Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and various dwarf planets like Pluto. The inner solar system is closer to the Sun, while the outer solar system is farther away.
gas
No, the first four inner planets of our solar system (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) are not gas giants. They are terrestrial planets, consisting of mostly rock and metal with thin atmospheres. Gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn are found in the outer region of our solar system.
Jupiter