Safekipedia
Solar SystemTerrestrial planetsTypes of planet

Terrestrial planet

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A visual comparison of the sizes of Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars to help understand planetary dimensions.

A terrestrial planet is a type of planet made mostly of silicate, rocks, or metals. These planets are also called tellurian planets, telluric planets, or rocky planets. In our Solar System, the terrestrial planets are the ones closest to the Sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. They have solid surfaces, unlike bigger gaseous planets, which are mostly hydrogen, helium, and water.

The four terrestrial planets of the Solar System: Mercury, Venus, Earth and MarsShown to scale

Terrestrial planets are important because they are similar to Earth. Scientists study them to learn more about our planet and if life might exist elsewhere. Some scientists think large moons, like Earth's Moon and Io, might also be like terrestrial planets because they are made of rock. Experts such as geologists, astronomers, and geophysicists study these planets.

Structure

All terrestrial planets in the Solar System have a similar basic structure. They have a central metallic core, mostly made of iron, surrounded by a silicate mantle.

These planets can have interesting surface features like canyons, craters, mountains, and volcanoes, depending on whether they have liquids that cause erosion or movements in their surfaces. They have secondary atmospheres created by volcanic activity or impacts from comets, unlike the outer, giant planets which have primary atmospheres captured directly from the solar nebula.

Terrestrial planets within the Solar System

Relative masses of the terrestrial planets of the Solar System, and the Moon (shown here as Luna)

The Solar System has four terrestrial planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. These planets are made mostly of rock and metal. Earth is the only one that has water and an active surface. Some moons, like Jupiter's moons Io and Europa, also have solid surfaces and might be similar to terrestrial planets.

When the Solar System was forming, many small bodies called planetesimals and proto-planets existed. Most of these merged to create the four terrestrial planets we see today. Others, like the asteroids Pallas and Vesta, survived but are smaller and not round. Some small bodies, such as 16 Psyche and 8 Flora, might be pieces of larger planets that broke apart long ago.

Extrasolar terrestrial planets

See also: Super-Earth, Mega-Earth, and List of nearest terrestrial exoplanet candidates

Sizes of Kepler planet candidates based on 2,740 candidates orbiting 2,036 stars as of 4 November 2013 (NASA)

Most planets found outside our Solar System are big, but since 2005, scientists have found hundreds that might be like Earth. Many of these are called super-Earths because they are a bit bigger than our Earth. Some of these planets are made of rock, like Earth, while others might have more gas.

The first planets found around stars were discovered in the early 1990s. In 2005, scientists found the first rocky planets around a normal star. Since then, many more Earth-like planets have been found. In 2011, the Kepler space telescope found its first Earth-sized planet around another star. Since then, Kepler and other tools have found hundreds of planets, some as small as our Moon and others a bit bigger than Earth.

Types

Further information: List of planet types

Artist's impression of a carbon planet

There are several types of solid planets. A silicate planet is made of rocky material with a metal core, like Venus, Earth, or Mars. An iron planet is mostly made of iron, which makes it very dense and small. Mercury is sometimes called an iron planet because it has a big iron core, even though its surface is rocky.

Other types include carbon planets, which are made mostly of carbon and might look like diamonds, and icy planets, which have surfaces covered in ice and can even have oceans inside. While our Solar System doesn’t have examples of all these types, many objects like moons and dwarf planets show similar features.

Images

A diagram showing the relative sizes of Earth, Mars, Venus, and Mercury to help compare their dimensions.
A colorful and simple illustration of the Solar System showing the Sun and planets to scale, perfect for learning about space!
A colorful educational image showing the planets of our solar system—Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—taken by NASA spacecraft. Great for learning about space!
A stunning view of Earth from space, showing Africa, Antarctica, and the Arabian Peninsula as seen by astronauts aboard Apollo 17.
A telescope image showing the first clear view of a planet forming around the star PDS 70.
A stunning view of Earth rising over the Moon as seen by astronauts on the Apollo 8 mission.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Terrestrial planet, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.