The Earth's atmosphere traps heat.
Not in our solar system. Nor have any been found elsewhere to date.
Yes. Gravitational attraction from other objects - mainly the other planets - will gradually change this path.
Yes. It is larger by both volume and by mass.Jupiter is only about 30% larger in diameter than Saturn, but its volume is half again that of all other planets combined, more than 1320 times the volume of Earth.But Jupiter is also around 2.5 times more massive than all of the other planets in our solar system put together (this also includes the Plutonian worlds). Jupiter's mass is equal to just under 318 Earths.If we took the next 4 planets in terms of size we would haveSaturn (95 Earths),Uranus (14.5 Earths),Neptune (17 Earths) - (Neptune is smaller but denser than Uranus)Earth (1 Earth),we see that the mass combined of these four is only 127.5 Earths, The remaining planets Venus (0.8 Earth) , Mars (0.1 Earth) and Mercury (0.055 Earth) add very little to the total mass of planets excluding Jupiter.(for mass comparisons, see the related link below)
Of the eight planets in our solar system (ignoring Pluto and other dwarf or minor planets), Mars is second smallest... only Mercury is smaller. Mars is about 53% of the diameter of Earth (about 15% of the volume), also about fifteen percent of its mass. Standing on its surface you'd feel a little under 2/5ths of Earth's surface gravity.
Mars, although Mercury is a very close second.Mercury is the smallest of the 8 major planets, and has the least mass. However, it is dense, and its smaller size means that it has slightly higher gravity *at its surface* than Mars does, even though Mars has about twice the mass of Mercury.Mars = 0.376 g (Earth gravity)Mercury = 0.38 g (Earth gravity)* Previously, Pluto had the smallest size and lowest surface gravity. But it is now classified with other dwarf planets and distant planetary bodies, which so far are all smaller than Mercury.
The inner planets are different from the other planets mainly because
In some cases, its because it's simply closer to the sun than other planets. In other cases, its because the Earth has an atmosphere that traps the heat in like the Greenhouse Effect purports.
Other planets
Other planets
Small
the suns gravity pull creates the earths movement as well as the other planets
The surface temperature of Venus is higher than the surface temperatures of the other inner planets because of its thick atmosphere.
exoplanets
They absorb radiant energy emitted by Earths surface
Yes the Earth does rotate like the other planets (except for the distance of the rotation(assuming your talking about the rotation around the Sun); the wobble of the Earths axis compared to other planets; and the time it takes to rotate)
In a word : "water".
the answer to the question what is earths name is PATRONUS