…is home to a massive, extremely radioactive mass, which formed in 1986, known as the “elephant’s foot”?
…is covered in volcanoes and sulfuric acid clouds?
…does not have a moon, and wouldn’t be able to due to the Sun’s gravitational pull?
…is the smallest of the gas giants?
…is home to the Great Red Spot, a storm larger than Earth which has been ongoing for hundreds of years?
…has two moons, Phobos and Deimos?
…has rings made of ice and dust which extend over 280,000km from its surface, but are only around 9 meters thick?
…ranges from 430°C during the day to -180°C at night?
…has several active global tectonic plates, including the Nazca, Cocos, and Juan de Fuca plates?
…is named after the Roman god of war?
…has the highest gravitational pull, at 2.54g?
…has dust storms which last for months and cover the entire planet?
…is home to the ever-burning Darvaza gas crater, nicknamed the “Door to Hell”?
…has a moon named Triton, who, in Greco-Roman mythology, was the son of this planet’s namesake?
…has a consistent and clear hexagonal cloud pattern at its north pole?
…was re-classified as a dwarf planet in 2006?
…was named by an 11 year old girl in Oxford, England in 1930?
…is by the hottest planet in our solar system at 460°C, hot enough to melt lead?
…was made into a “sandwich” in 2020, when two slices of bread were placed on opposite sides of the planet?
…has concrete evidence that water once flowed on its surface, and has a canyon system dwarfing the Grand Canyon?
…has a density lower than water?
…is the most similar to Earth in size and shape, often called its “twin”?
…was the first planet discovered by telescope in 1781?
…has days which are twice as long as its years due to its fast orbit and slow rotation?
…was discovered solely by mathematical calculations in 1846?
Earth
Jupiter
Mars
Mercury
Neptune
Pluto
Saturn
Uranus
Venus
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