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  2. Orbital eccentricity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbital_eccentricity

    The table lists the values for all planets and dwarf planets, and selected asteroids, comets, and moons. Mercury has the greatest orbital eccentricity of any planet in the Solar System (e = 0.2056), followed by Mars of 0.093 4. Such eccentricity is sufficient for Mercury to receive twice as much solar irradiation at perihelion compared to aphelion.

  3. Orbital period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbital_period

    The anomalistic period is the time that elapses between two passages of an object at its periapsis (in the case of the planets in the Solar System, called the perihelion), the point of its closest approach to the attracting body. It differs from the sidereal period because the object's semi-major axis typically advances slowly.

  4. Solar System belts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_System_belts

    Solar System planets 10 largest Trans-Neptunian objects. Solar System planets and dwarf planets listed for distances comparison to belts. The Solar System planets all orbit in near circular orbits. [22] [23] [24] Planets: Mercury 0.39 AU; Venus 0.72 AU; Earth 1 AU; Mars 1.52 AU; Jupiter 5.2 AU; Saturn 9.54 AU; Uranus 19.2 AU; Neptune 30.06 AU ...

  5. List of natural satellites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_natural_satellites

    Unlike most planetary moons, which are named from antiquity, all the moons of Uranus are named after characters from the works of Shakespeare and Alexander Pope's work The Rape of the Lock. Neptune has 16 known moons; the largest, Triton, accounts for more than 99.5 percent of all the mass orbiting the planet. Triton is large enough to have ...

  6. Jupiter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jupiter

    Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the largest in the Solar System.It is a gas giant with a mass more than 2.5 times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined and slightly less than one-thousandth the mass of the Sun. Jupiter orbits the Sun at a distance of 5.20 AU (778.5 Gm), with an orbital period of 11.86 years.

  7. Proxima Centauri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxima_Centauri

    Such a planet would lie within the habitable zone of Proxima Centauri, about 0.023–0.054 AU (3.4–8.1 million km) from the star, and would have an orbital period of 3.6–14 days. [86] A planet orbiting within this zone may experience tidal locking to the star. If the orbital eccentricity of this hypothetical planet were low, Proxima ...

  8. Apparent magnitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparent_magnitude

    200 km sized object about 90 AU (13 billion km) from the Sun and about 75 million times fainter than what can be seen with the naked eye. +27.7: Faintest objects observable with a single 8-meter class ground-based telescope such as the Subaru Telescope in a 10-hour image [74] +28.2: Halley's Comet: seen from Earth (2003)

  9. Stellar classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_classification

    The mass range for Y dwarfs is 9–25 Jupiter masses, but young objects might reach below one Jupiter mass (although they cool to become planets), which means that Y class objects straddle the 13 Jupiter mass deuterium-fusion limit that marks the current IAU division between brown dwarfs and planets.