Our Cosmic Neighborhood

From our small world we have gazed upon the cosmic ocean for thousands of years. Ancient astronomers observed points of light that appeared to move among the stars. They called these objects "planets," meaning wanderers, and named them after Roman deities—Jupiter, king of the gods; Mars, the god of war; Mercury, messenger of the gods; Venus, the goddes of love and beauty, and Saturn, father of Jupiter and god of agriculture. The stargazers also observed comets with sparkling tails, and meteors or shooting stars apparently falling from the sky.

Since the invention of the telescope, three more planets have been discovered in our solar system: Uranus (1781), Neptune (1846), and, now downgraded to a dwarf planet, Pluto (1930). In addition, there are thousands of small bodies such as asteroids and comets. Most of the asteroids orbit in a region between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, while the home of comets lies far beyond the orbit of Pluto, in the Oort Cloud.

The four planets closest to the sun—Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars—are called the terrestrial planets because they have solid rocky surfaces. The four large planets beyond the orbit of Mars—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—are called gas giants. Tiny, distant, Pluto has a solid but icier surface than the terrestrial planets.

Nearly every planet—and some of the moons—has an atmosphere. Earth's atmosphere is primarily nitrogen and oxygen. Venus has a thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide, with traces of poisonous gases such as sulfur dioxide. Mars's carbon dioxide atmosphere is extremely thin. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are primarily hydrogen and helium. When Pluto is near the sun, it has a thin atmosphere, but when Pluto travels to the outer regions of its orbit, the atmosphere freezes and collapses to the planet's surface. In that way, Pluto acts like a comet.

Moons, Rings, and Magnetospheres

There are 140 known natural satellites, also called moons, in orbit around the various planets in our solar system, ranging from bodies larger than our own moon to small pieces of debris.

From 1610 to 1977, Saturn was thought to be the only planet with rings. We now know that Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune also have ring systems, although Saturn's is by far the largest. Particles in these ring systems range in size from dust to boulders to house-size, and may be rocky and/or icy.

Most of the planets also have magnetic fields, which extend into space and form a magnetosphere around each planet. These magnetospheres rotate with the planet, sweeping charged particles with them. The sun has a magnetic field, the heliosphere, which envelops our entire solar system.

Ancient astronomers believed that the Earth was the center of the universe, and that the sun and all the other stars revolved around the Earth. Copernicus proved that Earth and the other planets in our solar system orbit our sun. Little by little, we are charting the universe, and an obvious question arises: Are there other planets where life might exist? Only recently have astronomers had the tools to indirectly detect large planets around other stars in nearby solar systems.

—Text courtesy NASA/JPL

More About the Solar System

  • Photo: Man wearing astronaut helmet and gloves

    Beyond Gravity

    Barring catastrophes, the third millennium will be the real age of space as today's rockets are replaced by ones that will make space travel as affordable as atmospheric flight.

  • Photo: Saturn and its rings

    Photo Gallery: Saturn

    Saturn's rings have bewitched sky watchers since Galileo first observed them in 1610. See why the second-largest planet in our solar system is also arguably the most beautiful.

  • Photo: Comet streaking through sky

    The Age of Comets

    Visitors from beyond Neptune, comets are a parade of cosmic snowballs that splay their greetings across the heavens and bring intriguing hints about the early solar system.

  • Photo: Firefly next to a searchlight

    Search for Other Earths

    In an astronomical breakthrough, scientists have begun discovering planet after planet circling around distant stars as the search narrows for a world like our own.

Newsletters

National Geographic Channel

  • Photo: The rednecks

    Rocket City Rednecks

    Wednesdays at 9P and 9:30P

    Meet a group of backwoods Alabama geniuses who tackle problems with hillbilly ingenuity.

  • Photo: Sparks fly in the shop.

    Mad Scientists

    Wednesdays at 10P and 10:30P

    Travel across America with host John Bowler as he seeks out the weirdest inventions.

  • Photo: East Coast Crip

    National Geographic Investigates

    Fridays at 8P, 9P, and 10P et/pt

    Get up close with some of the world's most fascinating underground communities, from gangs to cults to organized crime families.

National Geographic Magazine

  • Photo: Showgirl chickens

    The Great American Zoo Trip

    Joel Sartore Takes to the Road to Photograph Endangered Species

  • Photo: Cannon Beach, Oregon

    Tsunami Science Pictures

    Japan knows what to do when the water suddenly goes away. People don’t always heed the warnings. When and where will the next giant wave hit?

  • Photo: Rhodesian ridgebacks

    Dog DNA Pictures

    Scientists have found the secret recipe behind the spectacular variety of dog shapes and sizes, and it could help unravel the complexity of human genetic disease.

Get More From the Magazine »

Genographic