Technically it doesn't precisely fit any of them, but to a first approximation it fits not only each of the planets, but every other orbiting body everywhere.
Galaxies/nebulae are at the top of the tree; each one contains several billion stars. Each star might have many planets orbiting around it, and planets can have many moons.
The orbits of the planets, including Mars, are eliptical, not circular. Keplers observed positions did not fit a circular orbit. The differences led him to discover that the orbits were not circular, but eliptical.
you can fit 1million planets the size of earth in the sun
All the planets in the solar system would fit in the sun with lots of space left over.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar System so any of the other planets could fit inside a volume the size of Jupiter, some of them many times over.
Earth is the third planet from the Sun.
Galaxies/nebulae are at the top of the tree; each one contains several billion stars. Each star might have many planets orbiting around it, and planets can have many moons.
The orbits of the planets, including Mars, are eliptical, not circular. Keplers observed positions did not fit a circular orbit. The differences led him to discover that the orbits were not circular, but eliptical.
you can fit 1million planets the size of earth in the sun
All the planets in the solar system would fit in the sun with lots of space left over.
Over 1,000 planets the size of Earth can fit on Jupiter.
There are no planets that are "indoors." Planets are too large to fit inside of a house.
The universe is vast and contains billions of galaxies, each with billions of stars, many of which host multiple planets. While there isn't a definitive number of planets, estimates suggest there could be over 100 billion planets in our Milky Way galaxy alone. When considering the entire observable universe, the number of planets could reach into the trillions. Thus, the universe can accommodate an almost limitless number of planets.
about 4 or 5
Jupiter
99.8 percent of the total mass of our solar system is the Sun, and most of the rest is Jupiter. If there were 500 planets the size of Jupiter, they would STILL all fit inside the Sun.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar System so any of the other planets could fit inside a volume the size of Jupiter, some of them many times over.