In terms of AU and years, P squared= A cubed P squared= 100 cubed= 100,000 P=1000 The comet is in the 1000 year period
According to Kepler's law that says [ T2/R3 = constant ],
that would be about 31.62 years.
Venus, it takes 243 earth days for each rotation while it's planetary orbit takes only 225 earth days.
None in our Solar System. Outside of it, there are a bunch of planets whose name starts with "K2", or with "Kepler", or with "KELT". Check the Wikipedia article "List of exoplanets (full)" for the complete list.
There is no planet whose name contains 9 letters
The gas planets are any of the four large outer planets of the Solar System, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, which consist largely of gas and whose visible surfaces are not solid, though they have solid cores.
Probably. Small amounts of oxygen has already been detected on other planets (and moons) within our solar system, including:Saturn's moon RheaJupiter's moons Europa and GanymedeMars (0.13% of the atmosphere)
Not in our solar system there isn't.
Mercury
Jupiter. Its weight is roughly 2.5 times the size of all the other planets in our solar system combined.
Venus, it takes 243 earth days for each rotation while it's planetary orbit takes only 225 earth days.
There is no such planet known. In our solar system, the planet whose moon is closest in size to the planet which it orbits is none other than our own planet Earth. However, the Moon is still much smaller than the Earth. Pluto has a Moon that's big, but Pluto isn't a "planet" now, of course.
There is no such planet known. In our solar system, the planet whose moon is closest in size to the planet which it orbits is none other than our own planet Earth. However, the Moon is still much smaller than the Earth. Pluto has a Moon that's big, but Pluto isn't a "planet" now, of course.
Going outwards from the Sun, the next planet in the solar system after Earth would be Mars. Going inwards from Earth towards the Sun, the next planet is Venus - whose orbit is actually closer to Earth's than that of Mars.
Formerly than answer was Pluto, whose moon Charon is just over half its diameter. Now that Pluto is technically not a planet, than answer is Earth, whose moon is just over a quarter its diameter.
None in our Solar System. Outside of it, there are a bunch of planets whose name starts with "K2", or with "Kepler", or with "KELT". Check the Wikipedia article "List of exoplanets (full)" for the complete list.
No planet has been discovered yet whose average distance from the sunis smaller than that of Mercury.Mercury and Venus both orbit closer to the sun than Earth does.
The answer depends on the speed at where you define the limit of the solar system. The furthest planet, Neptune, has an orbit whose semi-major axis of approx 30.1 astronomical units (AU). The Kuiper belt, a ring of debris which are mostly lumps of ice, is at a distance of approx 50 AU. The heliopause, which is here the solar wind is stopped by the interstellar medium is at a distance of 128 AU. Voyager 1, for example, took 35 years to reach the heliopause.
There is no planet whose name contains 9 letters