Planets are celestial bodies that lack their own light, and they orbit their host star, in this case, within our solar system, all planets, including ours, orbit in an elliptical shape around the sun, which is our “host star.”
We always take pleasure in being able to admire at least one planet in the night sky, although not all of them are visible to the naked eye, we can also do it with telescopes. Their sizes and shapes have always interested me, no matter how many interpretations we may have, and what stands out most is the color that each of these objects possesses, but Do you know what color the planets are?
All the planets have sizes, colors, and shapes, and the latter are not very diverse, since they are all round, but they do have some different reliefs. According to the scientific journal, National GeographicThe planets are distinguished by these colors as a result of the following:
Mercury
The smallest planet in the solar system, and the closest to the sun, among the planets that we can see in the sky, and this is one of the most difficult planets to estimate due to its distance and size, and because it appears only a few minutes a day.
Mercury is a planet with a rocky surface and a very poor atmosphere, and this planet is painted in many colors, but it really has a striking similarity with our natural satellite (the Moon), both in color and because of its craters. It has a gray color, and is composed of hydrogen and helium, among countless types of sulfides, but magnesium and silicon are what give the smallest planet this appearance.
Venus
Sister planet Earth. Although Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun, Venus is the hottest of all space placeThis planet, due to its dense atmosphere, is full of carbon dioxide, and what causes this? The so-called greenhouse effect, and that the clouds here are made of sulfuric acid, so the smell on Venus is not pleasant, let’s say, because it smells like rotten eggs.
Apart from sulfuric acid, it also consists of nitrogen and carbon dioxide, and these are the two that give it the yellow color so characteristic of Venus.
Land
green ecologymentions that it is not necessary to do much research for this purpose, because it is enough to see a picture, from space, of our planet to know why it is also called the “blue planet” and that is because most of the Earth’s surface is water, which is also due to our atmosphere.
Why does it look blue if the water is transparent? The answer is in the water, and that is that the light that is there is reflected off the sea water, which in turn practically “absorbs” the tones that are considered warmer, allowing green and blue tones. And green tones are due to nature (all kinds of trees) Now you know why the planet is coloured.
Mars
The red planet, the most famous after Earth, its colorful color can be seen from the balcony of your home. This planet is the biggest challenge for scientists, as it has shown many signs that it likely hosted life in its past.
space placerefers to the fact that the planet has a low density in its atmosphere, which contains nitrogen, carbon dioxide and argon and its soil is covered in oxidized iron giving it its famous red colour.
Jupiter
The gas giant, that turbulent planet, is the largest in the solar system, with no fewer than 80 natural satellites, and has a distinct spot, which, more than an ordinary spot, is a storm that has been active for many years.
Its roughly mixed color of brown, orange, and beige is due to its predominant gases, with hydrogen and helium being predominant.
Saturn
The planet of the rings, though not the only one with these rings, is the only one with more visible ones, and it contains rocks and ice that come from comets that were breaking apart. It is very similar to Jupiter, but smaller.
In the same way, among its gases are hydrogen and helium, the color of which is the same as that of Jupiter.
Uranus
The strange ball of the family, Uranus, has many things that are very different from the rest of the planets in the solar system. One of them is that its rotation is opposite to that of the rest, and the strangest of all is that it rotates on its side. It also has rings, although they are less visible than Saturn’s.
It has at least 27 natural satellites, and among its gases methane, hydrogen, helium and ammonia predominate, the planet takes on its color due to methane. Oh, and as an added fact, this is the coldest planet out of all the previous ones, because it receives very little heat from the sun.
Neptune
The last planet in the solar system, and a gaseous one, looks quite similar to Uranus, but much bluer.
Another one wrapped in turbulence, dark and cold, frigid, far from our host star, Neptune, is an ice giant, with gases such as ammonia, methane, and helium, the latter being the most ubiquitous, and as a result. The color of Neptune is more intense than that of Uranus. Also, it has rings in it, though it’s pretty weak.
Therefore, what determines the color of each of the planets is nothing more and nothing less than the composition of its surface and atmosphere, and therefore, the gas that prevails on the planet is what will give the color.
Share the science, share the knowledge.
“Creator. Troublemaker. Hardcore alcohol lover. Web evangelist. Extreme pop culture practitioner. Devoted zombie scholar. Avid introvert.”