Planets

Overview

Stemming from the Greek word for "wanderers," planets have long captured humanity's attention as they moved across the sky against a backdrop of fixed stars. Planets are distinct from stars in that they have no internal source of radiation and typically orbit stars. While our solar system has eight planets, astronomers continue to discover more throughout the universe as technology advances. Find out more about your favorite or least familiar planet with our collection of the internet's best resources on planets.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Images of Jupiter in unprecedented detail

    Jupiter has never seemed closer and clearer than it does in these images gathered by the James Webb Telescope. Behold beautiful auroras, hazy clouds, and more. This may not be the classic image of Jupiter (and its stormy Great Red Spot) you're used to, but it tells scientist, and us, more about the largest planet in our solar system.

  • What is Mars Curiosity rover up to?

    Mars continues to reveal itself through the Mars Curiosity Rover, which continues to ramble and roll across the red planet's surface. Here is NASA’s real-time portal for Mars exploration, featuring the latest news, images, and discoveries from the Red Planet. See evidence of the ancient rivers that once ran through the martian landscape, and see how Curiosity is setting the scene for possible future exploration by humans.

  • An interactive look at Neptune, the distant planet

    Dark, cold, and whipped by supersonic winds, Neptune is a gas giant made of hydrogen, helium, ammonia, and methane, and was the first planet discovered through mathematics rather than direct observation. It's also the smallest of the gas planets on the periphery of the solar system. Learn more about the last planet in the solar system through the NASA site.

  • Everything you need to know about Jupiter, the gas giant

    NASA introduces you to the fifth planet from the sun, the gas giant Jupiter. When it comes to our solar system, Jupiter is the biggest kid on the block. Named after the king of the Ancient Roman gods, Jupiter is a planet of storms and chaos, most famously in its Great Red Spot, a hurricane larger than the earth itself.

  • A look at Uranus, our distant icy cousin

    NASA provides a profile of the seventh planet from the sun and the third largest—Uranus. More than just a punchline, the planet is cold, windy, and utterly inhospitable. It's also a lovely blue-green, due to the large amounts of methane it contains, with faint rings and two dozen moons. Learn more about this not-so-gentle gas giant.

  • View the surface of Mars from NASA's Perseverance

    Simulate a visit to the red planet with the Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover. This 3D interactive experience lets you explore various locations on the martian surface. See closeup images the rover has taken and view key points of interest. It's the next best thing to being there and certainly far safer!

  • Travel through deep time with this interactive Earth

    Explore key moments in Earth’s transformative history as continents drift and climate fluctuates over 4.6 billion years. The Smithsonian presents a series of interactive snapshots of the earth. From its toddler years during the Hadean period, when its surface was mostly molten, to the mostly unidentifiable landmasses of the future earth, 100 million years from now.

  • How we know what’s deep inside the Earth, despite never traveling there

    We'll likely never see the Earth's core, but we can make educated guesses about what it's like down there. Nearly as hot as the sun's surface and under impossibly high pressure, the inner Earths extreme conditions make it impossible to explore. Yet, seismic waves during earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and light waves from the sun provide fascinating insights about our planet’s mantle, crust, and core.

  • Everything you need to know about Mars

    The Lunar and Planetary Institute provides assorted resources about the red planet, Mars. Review this basic 101 level introduction and get to know our solar system neighbor. Learn about Mars' planet-wide dust storms, staggeringly high mountains (six of which dwarf Mount Everest), and whether there's water there below the surface.

  • How Venus formed

    Sometimes called the Earth's twin, Venus certainly isn't an identical one. The second brightest object in the nighttime sky, right after the Moon, while Venus has a central iron core and a rocky mantle like Earth's, that's where the similarities end. Discover these and other facts in this video.

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Explore Space

From roughly 60 miles above the Earth's surface to farther than light has traveled during the entire age of the universe, space has captured human imagination for millennia. Explore the final frontier with the best resources curated from across the internet.

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