No except tat it rotates the fastest.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system. The data below shows how all other planets mass is compared with Jupiters, in terms of percentage of Jupiters mass.Planet% mass of JupiterMercury0.017Venus0.256Earth0.315Mars0.034Jupiter100.000Saturn29.941Uranus4.574Neptune5.396
Saturn in terms of planets. The order of the planets, from the sun outward, goes: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, {Asteroid Belt}, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto( Not classified as a planet anymore)
It matters what you mean by "size". There isn't a planet that even comes near half the mass of Jupiter, the closest candidate would be Saturn, but I'm guessing that by "size" you mean diameter. In that case, the answer would be Uranus, whose radius is about 25,000 km (compared to Jupiter's 70,000 km). That still isn't half, but it's the closest answer there is. I think it's probably the volume that's meant. In that case Saturn is a fairly good answer.
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)
The terms "inferior planet" and "superior planet" were originally used in the geocentric cosmology of Claudius Ptolemy to differentiate those planets (Mercury and Venus) that were between the stationary Earth and the orbiting Sun from those planets (Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn), which lay beyond the Sun's orbit.The terms are now used with the heliocentric model."Inferior Planets" have orbits closer to the Sun than the Earth's orbit.They are Mercury and Venus.The "Superior Planets" have orbits outside the Earth's orbit.They are Mars,Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.So, the meaning is slightly different from "Inner Planets" and "Outer Planets".
it farted
Saturn is second largest, next to Jupiter.
Jupiter is the largest of the 8 major planets, and the largest body in the solar system except for the Sun itself.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system. The data below shows how all other planets mass is compared with Jupiters, in terms of percentage of Jupiters mass.Planet% mass of JupiterMercury0.017Venus0.256Earth0.315Mars0.034Jupiter100.000Saturn29.941Uranus4.574Neptune5.396
The planets revolve around the sun. The planets rotate on their own axis.
Saturn in terms of planets. The order of the planets, from the sun outward, goes: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, {Asteroid Belt}, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto( Not classified as a planet anymore)
in terms of satalites and rovers, mars, venus, jupiter, saturn, mercury
Mercury is the smallest of the 8 major planets. It is smaller in size than Jupiter's moon Ganymede, or Saturn's moon Titan. But it has a greater mass than those moons due to its higher average density.
I believe In terms of MASS, may be comparable to our sun. In terms of Size/volume, may be comparable to planets.
It matters what you mean by "size". There isn't a planet that even comes near half the mass of Jupiter, the closest candidate would be Saturn, but I'm guessing that by "size" you mean diameter. In that case, the answer would be Uranus, whose radius is about 25,000 km (compared to Jupiter's 70,000 km). That still isn't half, but it's the closest answer there is. I think it's probably the volume that's meant. In that case Saturn is a fairly good answer.
Jupiter ranks highest of the eight planets in terms of mass and size. It's height in the sky will vary though throughout the night as the earth rotates.
Uranus is the 3rd to largest planet.