Well, in my solar system liquid isn't really that rare. The second planet in my solar system has an almost entirely liquid crust, and a liquid mantle. The third planet orbiting the star in my solar system has a surface over 75% covered in liquid, and has a liquid mantle. The sixth and seventh planets in my solar system both have large hydrogen oceans. Several of the moons orbiting the sixth and seventh planets in my solar system also have liquids. I don't see why liquid could be called rare in my solar system. What about yours?
That would be difficult to explain. -- The Sun IS a star. -- It IS in my solar system. -- It's the ONLY star in my solar system. -- So the sun is THE star in my solar system.
A galaxy is larger than a solar system so that is impossible.
the sun is. It is also the ONLY star in THIS solar system.
First of all, Jupiter is not a star. It would have to be if it and all its satellites were to be a solar system. Secondly, it itself orbits a star, our sun, so it is in a solar system.
On average there are as many solar eclipses as there are lunar ones. But each lunar eclipse can be seen from half the Earth, while a solar eclipse can only be seen from a relatively small strip of the Earth's surface. So in any one place it seems that solar eclipses are rare.
Uranus is one of four gas giant planets in our solar system; many other stars also are orbited by gas giants, so they are not rare.
Solar means space and the Solar System is a system (with the moon, sun, planets, stars, etc.) so the Solar System is really a Space System.
Solar energy produces evaporation when it heats up a liquid so that the liquid starts evaporating from the surface. So it's really what solar energy does to evaporation and not the other way round.
A comet is in a solar system. A solar system is in a galaxy, so technically a comet is also in a galaxy.
It comes from the Latin "sol" for sun,so sun-system or Solar System.
That would be difficult to explain. -- The Sun IS a star. -- It IS in my solar system. -- It's the ONLY star in my solar system. -- So the sun is THE star in my solar system.
There is soil on Earth, and Earth is part of the solar system, so you could say that soil is part of the solar system.
My (and I assume your) solar system revolves around the sun, which is a star. So yes, there is one star in our solar system.
They're not all that rare; there's one about every year somewhere.
The Earth is part of the Solar System, so they are of the same age.
A galaxy is larger than a solar system so that is impossible.
There is only one star that is part of our solar system. That is the sun. The stars we see are outside our solar system. "Solar" refers to our star. It holds the solar system together as it is through its gravity that everything orbits it, creating the solar system. So it is the key part of our solar system. That is why it is part of it.