|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SIV-SOU |
|
|
SOLAR SYSTEM , in astronomy, the group of heavenly bodies, comprising the sun and the bodies which move around the sun as a. centre of attraction, of which the Earth is one. These bodies may be classified as follows: first the Sun, 0, distinguished as containing much the greater part of all the matter composing the system, being. more than 600 times as massive as all the other bodies combined. It is this great
body
minor planets, much smaller than the major planets, forming a separate
accumulation of meteoric bodies (see COMET).The major planets are separated into two groups of four each, between which the minor planets, for the most part, revolve. The arrangement of the major planets, with the. numbers of their respective satellites thus far known, in the order of distance from the sun, is as follows:The first group in orderthe smaller major planetscomprises:- Mercury, , with no known satellite; Venus, ?, with no known satellite; The Earth, , with one satellite, the moon; Mars, d', with two satellites. Outside of this group lies the zone of minor planets or asteroids. The outer group of major planets comprises: Jupiter, with eight satellites; Saturn, h, with ten satellites; Uranus, or gt, with four satellites; Neptune, with one satellite. The distances separating the individual orbits in each group seem to. approximate to a certain order of progression, expressed in Bode's law (see BODE). But there is an obvious gap between the two groups of major planets which is filled by the group of minor planets. Taking the mean distance of this group as that of a planet
A remarkable feature of the solar system, which distinguishes it from all other known systems in the universe, is the symmetry of arrangement and motion of its greater bodies. All the major planets and many of the minor planets revolve in elliptic orbits so nearly circular in form that the unaided eye would not notice the deviation from that form. But as the orbits are not centred on the sun, which is in a focus of each, the displacement of the seeming circle would be readily seen in the case of Mercury and of Mars. The same statements are true of the orbits of the satellites around their primaries. The major planets all move around the sun in the same direction, from west to east
rule
retrograde .For the elements of the orbits, and the general character of the several planets see PLANET
End of Article: SOLAR SYSTEM If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/SIV_SOU/SOLAR_SYSTEM.html"> SOLAR SYSTEM </a> |
|
|
(Previous) SOLAR PARALLAX |
(Next) SOLAR, SOLLER (Lat. solarium, Fr. galetas, Ital... |
|
Sponsored Advertisements