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The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars nner planets are relatively small and rocky. are known as “terrestrial” planets.

The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

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Page 1: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

The Inner Planets

1. Mercury

2. Venus

3. Earth

4. Mars

The inner planets are relatively small and rocky.

They are known as “terrestrial” planets.

Page 2: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Mercury is the planet closest to the Sun

It is not much larger than our moon, and it has no moons of its own.

Page 3: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

The surface of Mercury is covered with craters.

Its interior is composed of nickel and iron.

It has a thin atmosphere and, because of this, experiencesgreat temperature extremes.

(430 degrees Celsius in the day, -170 degrees Celsius at night!)

Page 4: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Exploration of Mercury was conducted by the space probeMariner 10 in 1974.

Page 5: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Venus is the second planet from the sun.

It is similar in size to Earth.

Page 6: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

The atmosphere of Venus is very thick. Because of this, the Sun’s heat gets trapped and causes the planet to heat up.

The temperature there has gotten hot enough to melt lead!

This is called the greenhouse effect when the atmosphere traps heat.

Page 7: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Venus rotates on its axis in the opposite direction from the otherplanets. It rotates from east to west. This is known as retrograde motion.

Venus has no moons.

Page 8: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Exploration of Venus is difficult.

For example, one spacecraft landed on its surface only toburn up 23 minutes later!

However, the Magellan probe in 1990 was able to use radarto generate computer images of Venus.

Page 9: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Earth is the thirdplanet from the Sun.

70% of Earthis water.

Page 10: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Earth has an atmosphere high in oxygen.

Page 11: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun. It is about half the sizeof the Earth.

The atmosphere on Mars is mostly carbon dioxide.

Mars has two very small moons.

Page 12: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

Mars has seasons, just like Earth.

It is thought that there is frozen water under the surface of Mars.

Page 13: The Inner Planets 1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars The inner planets are relatively small and rocky. They are known as “terrestrial” planets

The remote controlled explorer Sojourner explored the surfaceof Mars in 1997.