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The planets are normally classified in size by their equatorial diameter.
Well there's no size, how big must be because planets in solar system are different sizes and size is not important. Don't ask questions like this if you don't know what the solar system is!
Earth is the fifth largest of the eight planets of the Solar System
Amongst the planets in the Solar System, it is the third largest.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar System so any of the other planets could fit inside a volume the size of Jupiter, some of them many times over.
The planets are normally classified in size by their equatorial diameter.
Well there's no size, how big must be because planets in solar system are different sizes and size is not important. Don't ask questions like this if you don't know what the solar system is!
The planets of our solar system are most definitely NOT all the same size.
Saturn is the second largest planet of all eight planets in our solar system.
There are eight planets in our solar systemThe Planets extending from the sun in order:MercuryVenusEarthMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptuneWe've found 5 dwarf planets as wellThe dwarf planets in size order:ErisPlutoHaumeaMakemakeCeres
U can group the planets by size,weight and amount of moons
Roughly in order of decreasing size and mass, the objects in the Solar System are: the Sun; the planets; moons; dwarf planets; other planetoids; comets.
Of the eight planets in our solar system, Earths is the fifth largest or the fourth smallest.
Mercury is around 4,880km in diameter, the smallest planet, while Jupiter has the largest diameter of all the planets in our solar system, 142,985km at the equator (11.2 times that of earths).
Earth is the fifth largest of the eight planets of the Solar System
The mean size(volume) of all eight planets in the solar system is around 2.96 * 10^23 m^3 which equals about 273 earths.
Amongst the planets in the Solar System, it is the third largest.