None exactly, but Earth and Venus. Earth is close at 40,054 km.
Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, has a diameter of about 142,800 km(Earth's is about 13,000). That's 11 times the diameter of Earth's.
Saturn.
The largest planet in the solar system is Jupiter, with a diameter 11.209 times that of the Earth
Betelgeuse is around 10 times greater in diameter than Rigel.
Only Mercury (Pluto also was in there, but it's now a "minor planet).
Earth's diameter is about 3.7 times bigger than the Moon's Earth's volume is about 50 times greater than the Moon's Earth's surface area is about 14.29 times greater than the Moon's Earth's mass is about 81.3 times greater than the Moon's
Mercury. It has a diameter of around 4880km, while Earths diameter is 12104 km on average.
Jupiter
Jupiter (142,985 km) and Saturn (120,534 km)
Jupiter's diameter is about 11 times greater than the Earth's diameter.
More Mass = Greater "surfacegravity".But also alarger diameter = Less "surface gravity".So, for example, if the planet is larger than Earthand has more mass then the gravitational force at its surfacecould be greater or lessthan Earth's.
The diameter of Mercury is 4,879 km (3,031 miles), making it the smallest actual planet in our solar system. This diameter is about 38% that of Earth.However, its higher density gives it a greater mass than the moons Ganymede and Titan, which have larger diameters.
The largest planet in the solar system is Jupiter, with a diameter 11.209 times that of the Earth
No, only if the diameter is bigger than the radius is the radius smaller than the diameter.
There are two such planets: Venus and Earth.
y
No, quite the opposite.
Mercury has a great many craters and is the smallest planet in the solar system, its diameter being about 38 percent of the diameter of Earth but more than double the diameter of the dwarf planet Pluto.
The smallest planet in our Solar System is Mercury. The second-smallest is Mars, which has MORE than half of Earth's diameter.