Solar System 101 | National Geographic

– [Narrator] Our solar system is one
of over 500 known solar systems
in the entire Milky Way galaxy.
The solar system came into being
about 4.5 billion years ago, when a cloud
of interstellar gas and dust collapsed,
resulting in a solar nebula, a swirling disc
of material that collided to form the solar system.
The solar system is located
in the Milky Way’s Orion star cluster.
Only 15% of stars in the galaxy host planetary systems,
and one of those stars is our own sun.
Revolving around the sun are eight planets.
The planets are divided into two categories,
based on their composition,
Terrestrial and Jovian.
Terrestrial planets including Mercury, Venus, Earth,
and Mars, are primarily made of rocky material.
Their surfaces are solid, they don’t have ring systems,
they have very few or no moons,
and they are relatively small.
The smallest and closest to the sun is Mercury,
which has the shortest orbit in the solar system
at about three Earth months.
Venus is the hottest planet, with temperatures
of up to 867 degrees Fahrenheit, due to an atmosphere
of carbon dioxide and extensive lava flows.
Next to this world of fire is a world of water, Earth.
The water systems on this planet help create
the only known environment in the universe
capable of sustaining life.
The last of the terrestrial planets, Mars,
might have also supported life about 3.7 billion years ago,
when the planet had a watery surface, and moist atmosphere.
Beyond the four Terrestrial planets
of the inner solar system lie the Jovian planets
of the outer solar system.
The Jovian planets include gas giants Jupiter and Saturn
and ice giants Uranus and Neptune.
The gas giants are predominantly made of helium
and hydrogen, and the ice giants also contain rock, ice,
and a liquid mixture of water, methane, and ammonia.
All four Jovian planets have multiple moons,
sport ring systems, have no solid surface, and are immense.
The largest Jovian is also the largest planet
in the solar system, Jupiter.
Nearby is Saturn, the solar system’s second largest planet.
Its signature rings are wide enough
to fit between Earth and the moon,
but are barely a kilometer thick.
Past Saturn are the ice giants, Uranus and Neptune.
The slightly bigger of these ice giants, Uranus,
is famous for rotating on its side.
Next to Uranus is Neptune, the outermost planet
in the solar system, and also one of the coldest.
Orbiting the Terrestrial planets is the asteroid belt,
a flat disc of rocky objects, full of remnants
from the solar system’s formation.
From microscopic dust particles,
to the largest known object, the dwarf planet, Ceres.
Another disc of space debris lies much further out,
and orbits the Jovian planets, the icy Kuiper Belt.
Apart from asteroids, the Kuiper Belt is also home
to dwarf planets, such as Pluto,
and is the birthplace of many comets.
Beyond the Kuiper Belt is the Oort Cloud,
a vast, spherical collection of icy debris.
It is considered the edge of the solar system
since that is where the gravitational
and physical influences of the sun end.
Our solar system’s particular configuration
of planets and other celestial objects,
all revolving around a life-giving star,
make it a special place to call home.

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