Questions fly through our head every day, questions that we never give a second thought to, questions we forget a second later. Here we are going to try and answer some of them.
Thursday, 30 July 2015
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System
Hi Guys, I'm sorry I haven't posted in a while but I'm hoping that this will make up for it. In the time that I wasn't posting, I was on Tumblr writing a mini series about the solar system, which I hope will entertain and inform you all on the wonders of our planetary neighbors, I would also like to add that as it was inspired by the photos of Pluto, I started at the outside and worked inwards, meaning that after the Mars Post, there is a significant drop in quantity. Anyways I guess I should include my outro here as I already uploaded them all in order. The Solar system is massively more magnificent than any human can truly comprehend. One day it may be possible for our descendants to go swimming in the mists of Saturn or to dive deeply under the seas of Ganymede. However at the end of the day we're in the best age of humanity, because what they may take for granted, we have the unrivalled satisfaction of discovering. And with that enjoy my friends, see you soon :)
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System - Mercury

It also has a unique kind of atmosphere, where although solar winds are always blowing it away, they are also constantly replenishing it, through radioactive decay and micrometeors causing dust. It is also very closely the second densest planet with about 5.4g per cubic centimeter.
Its extreme closeness to our sun also makes this planet extremely challenging to study, however two probes have managed to visit mercury, including messenger (a nice reminder of the god for which mercury was named) and together those two probes have mapped out the surface.

This extremely small, fast moving planet is by far one of the more interesting as it has preserved the history of our solar system in its craters where various information on impacts may be found. It is also an oddity as planets go, even in our solar system. Making it seem all the truer that great things come in small packages.
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System - Venus

As romantic as all of the names and coincidences may sound it doesn’t change the fact that Venus is effectively a planet sized death trap. The atmospheric pressure on Venus is equivalent to 92 times that on earth which is the same as in the deep sea. This means that any humans on the surface would simply be squished and that is if the rest of it didn’t kill them first.


Despite this (and by the power of human stubbornness) various probes have actually been sent to Venus and several Russian landers actually landed on the planet (where each of them have been promptly destroyed). The most successful mission to date has been Venera 13 which managed to survive 2 hours on the surface of the planet, despite being designed to last 30 minutes) and has also sent back colour photographs of the surface of the planet.
This sister to Earth is fascinatingly deadly, and due to its unique atmosphere and composition, gives extremely interesting data for our scientists to study. However it is also a sharp reminded of how dangerous our solar system is, that even our own “sister planet” would kill us in only a matter of seconds.
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System - Earth

Earth is the largest rocky planet in our solar system. It is also the densest with a Deity of about 5.5 grams per cubic centimeter approximately. Surprisingly it rotates exactly once a day and shockingly it orbits our sun exactly once per year. Although the rotation is currently in the process of slowing down which means that it adds an extra 17 milliseconds per day per 100 years.

But what makes Earth really unique is the sheer amount of life that has flourished there. We have studies thousands of exo planets and have yet to find one where life is likely to be as abundant as Earth. Because not only has life formed on Earth, but life has thrived, for millions and millions of years life has prevailed, our delicate complex carbon structures refusing to be destroyed by meteorites, volcanic eruptions, floods, droughts and while our Earth has grown mountains and created whole continents since the first slimy little thing crawled out of the sea there has always been life. And likely as not there will always be life, until the planet itself dies.
If that doesn’t make it the most incredible place we know then I don’t know what does.
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System - Mars


This planet should be a familiar sight for anyone. The red planet, AKA Mars is a massive focus of astronomers and astrobiologists alike as it lies in our sun’s habitable region and there is strong evidence that is once contained flowing water and was very like earth. This also implies a very strong possibility of there having been life on mars at some point or another.
Because of this everyone on Earth is raving over mars with a rover (that has its own twitter page https://twitter.com/marscuriosity ) currently rolling around looking for life and taking selfies and another mission planned for next year to send an european rover to mars. However despite all of these successes only 18 of the 40 missions to Mars have actually been successful.
Something lesser known however is that there are bits of Mars right here on earth. Due to violent collisions with Mars, meteorites have ejected rocks off the planet into space which have traveled for a very long time before crashing into our very own little lump of space rock. This means that scientists could study mars before they even got there in the first place!.
This red lump of rock has the largest dust storms in the universe (which is saying something considering half of our planets are basically made of dust) and its reddish tinge is given by iron rich minerals on its rocky surface.
We may well never know if life inhabited Mars all those millions of years ago, but there almost definitely will be soon, with NASA planning to spend volunteers to live on mars around the year 2030. This planet may be past its glory days, but that doesn’t mean its rusty surface is any less remarkable.
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System - Jupiter

This is the king of our solar system. A truly gargantuan planet, its mass is that of the rest of the solar system COMBINED and consists entirely of gas.
See the big red spot? That is a storm that is big enough to fit 3 entire earth’s inside it and has been raging for at least 350 years at this point.

A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Solar System - Saturn

This ringed giant is most likely familiar to you all. Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun, the second largest in our solar system and one of the more easily recognisable planets.
It is a gas giant like its neighbours and its rings are composed of small pieces of rock thought to be from a moon that collided with something long ago. The planet itself is composed of gas which is less dense than water which means that the entire planet could float in a big enough bowl and titan, its largest moon, is thought to be a potential harbour for non earthlike life, due to anomalies observed in the atmosphere and probes will be sent in the near future to investigate.

It might be one of the more easily recognised planets, but, like the rest of our vast, vast universe, there is still a lot about it that most people do not know.
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