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The Planets, Showing their Relative Distances and Dimensions

The Planets, Showing their Relative Distances and Dimensions.jpg The comparative sizes of the sun and the planetsThumbnailsThe Skull and Brain-Case of PithecanthropusThe comparative sizes of the sun and the planetsThumbnailsThe Skull and Brain-Case of PithecanthropusThe comparative sizes of the sun and the planetsThumbnailsThe Skull and Brain-Case of PithecanthropusThe comparative sizes of the sun and the planetsThumbnailsThe Skull and Brain-Case of PithecanthropusThe comparative sizes of the sun and the planetsThumbnailsThe Skull and Brain-Case of PithecanthropusThe comparative sizes of the sun and the planetsThumbnailsThe Skull and Brain-Case of Pithecanthropus

(Drawn approximately to scale)

The isolation of the Solar System is very great. On the above scale the nearest star (at a distance of 25 trillions of miles) would be over one half mile away. The hours, days, and years are the measures of time as we use them; that is: Jupiter's "Day" (one rotation of the planet) is made in ten of our hours; Mercury's "Year" (one revolution of the planet around the Sun) is eighty-eight of our days. Mercury's "Day" and "Year" are the same. This planet turns always the same side to the Sun.