Dear Diary

Hottest and Coldest Planets in the Solar System

By Rahila Ahmed
 | 24 Feb 2022

Our planetary group comprises 8 planets, 2 bantam planets (all around known), 575 normal satellites, 796354 known minor planets, and 4143 known comets.


Every one of the parts of the nearby planet group rotates around the star, Sun. It is accepted that the age of our planetary group is 4.568 billion years. The 8 significant planets are grouped into Giant planets and earthly planets. The monster planets are composed of gas or ice. Earthbound planets, then again, are composed of rocks.


The rundown of the planets from most sweltering to coldest and their surface temperatures are beneath the table.


  1. Venus

Venus, the most sultry planet of the planetary group, is the second planet from the sun. Galileo Galilei was the primary stargazer to see this planet through his telescope and record the discoveries. It is named after the Greek Goddess, Aphrodite, and the Roman goddess, Venus as this planet is the most brilliant divine body overhead. It sparkles so brilliantly as it reflects almost 70% of the daylight that it retains. Venus has a retrograde turn, and that implies that it moves from east to west in the clockwise heading. A reality about Venus is that the constant temperatures are something similar.


  1. Mercury

Mercury, the planet that is nearest to the sun, should be visible from the earth without the utilization of a telescope. The main individual to see this planet through a telescope was Galileo Galilei. Mercury goes at a speed of around 47 kilometers each second. The outer layer of this planet is basically the same as the outer layer of Earth's normal satellite, the moon.


  1. Earth

Earth, the fifth-biggest planet in the planetary group, is the third most sultry planet. It is the main planet in the planetary group where life has been noticed. The name earth is gotten from the Greek word "Gaia", and that implies land matter. It is likewise accepted that the name is roused by the Roman word for prolific soil.


  1. Mars

Mars, named after the Greek God of war, is accepted to have had water once. A couple of stargazers accept that this planet has water even presently. The planet has a thick center that is comprised of iron, nickel and follows measures of sulfur. Pits, fields, and volcanoes have been seen on the world's surface.

  1. Jupiter

Jupiter is the fifth most sweltering and the fifth planet from the sun. However it is very a long way from the focal star, its day comprises only 10 hours. This implies that one day on earth could be two and half days on Jupiter.

This planet's attractive field is multiple times more grounded than the attractive field of the earth. The size of Jupiter is equivalent to that of 1,321 piles of earth.

  1. Saturn

Saturn is otherwise called the ringed planet as it has in excess of 30 rings. You can see up to 3 rings in an ordinary telescope and up to 8 rings in a strong telescope. This planet takes almost 30 earth a very long time to go round the sun. However, it pivots around its hub in 10.6 hours. Saturn's moon, the Titan is bigger than Mercury. This planet weighs multiple times the heaviness of earth.

  1. Uranus

The seventh planet of our planetary group, Uranus was formally distinguished in the year 1781 by William Herschel. This planet is named after the Greek God, Ouranos. It pivots on its side, in an east-west heading, similar to Venus. This planet has 13 known rings and 27 noticed regular satellites.

  1. Neptune

This gigantic ice monster planet has 14 known regular satellites and the quickest windspeeds of the relative multitude of planets. The main record of this planet was made by the cosmologists, Urbain Jean Joseph Le Verrier and Johann Galle on September 23, 1846. Its moon, Triton is the main normal satellite that has retrograde revolution.

The splendid lights in the far-off sky have consistently caught our advantage and enthralled our minds.


The researchers accept that there might actually be other such planetary groups in the universe with their own arrangement of planets and regular satellites. Do you suppose something like this is conceivable? Is there life out there? Share your contemplations and thoughts with us.

About the author

Rahila Ahmed is working in Pratham Education Foundation and works on aspects of Teacher Support Management for the teacher capacity development portal: Gurushala. Any views expressed are personal.

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