By radius, none of the Sol planets has an equatorial radius 17x the Earths:
Saturn's eq. radius is about 9 times bigger than Earth's
Jupiter (Sol's largest planet) 'eq radius is about 11 times that of Earth's
Neptune's is almost 4x Earth's
Uranus' is about 4x Earth's
all other planets are smaller
By Mass it is Neptune:
Saturn's mass is about 95 times Earth's
Jupiter's mass is about 319 times Earth's.
Uranus' mass is about 14 times Earth's
Neptune's mass is about 17 times Earth's
all other are lighter
It all depends. If compare it to the size of us then it is huge but in space it would be considered tiny. Jupiter is 500 times its size. The Sun is 500 times Jupiter's size and a red Giant is the size of 500 Suns. So it would not huge or even medium in space and not even the sun would be considered large!
The sun is 30000 chocolate unicorns times larger
There is no "typical" size for a planet, as they can vary greatly in size. However, Earth is considered an average-sized planet in our solar system.
The sizes of planets vary greatly. For example, Jupiter is about 11 times the diameter of Earth, while Venus is slightly smaller. Mercury is the smallest planet, being about one-third the size of Earth. Neptune, the farthest planet from the sun, is about four times the Earth's diameter.
The largest planet in the Solar System is Jupiter which is 1,321.3 times the volume of the Earth.
No planet is. Jupiter, however, is 318 times the mass of Earth.
The radius of Uranus is roughly 4 times the radius of Earth. However, in volume, it would be around 43=64 times larger than Earth. Hence, There is no planet in our solar system which is four times the size of the Earth.
No not by a long shot. Jupiter is About 320 times the size of earth and is the largest planet in our solar system.
No planet is exactly the size of Earth. Venus is close to Earth's size but slightly smaller.
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Yes. Neptune and Uranus are both about 4 times the diameter of Earth. Jupiter is nearly 12 times the diameter of Earth.
No planet.
Neptune is about 3.8 times the size of Earth in terms of its equatorial radius. It is the fourth-largest planet in our solar system by diameter.
Venus, hands down. Venus is very nearly the same size as Earth. Jupiter is several times larger.
Jupiter has approximately that surface gravity.
That would be Jupiter. The Great Red Spot is a storm more than twice the size of Earth.
It isn't a dwarf planet, it's six times the size of earth and is classed as a gas giant, and it is mostly composed of gases.