Mercury
- Numerous craters and large impact basins mark the surface of Mercury, the planet closest to the …
Basic Planetary Data Mercury's orbit lies between the Sun and the orbit of Venus. Along with Venus, Earth, and Mars, Mercury is one of the inner planets nearest to the Sun. The inner planets are also known as the terrestrial, or Earth-like, planets. They are dense, rocky bodies that are much smaller than the solar system's outer planets. Mercury has no known moons.
Size, Mass, and Density Mercury is the smallest planet in both mass and diameter. It is about 18 times less massive than Earth. With a diameter of about 3,032 miles (4,879 kilometers), Mercury is not quite two fifths the size of Earth. It is only about a third larger than Earth's Moon. In fact, two moons in the solar system—Jupiter's moon Ganymede and Saturn's moon Titan—are larger than Mercury. However, Mercury is larger than the dwarf planet Pluto. For some 75 years, when Pluto was classified as a planet, Mercury was considered the second-smallest planet.
Mercury is the densest planet in the solar system, followed by Earth (if one takes into account the planets' internal compression because of gravity). Mercury is unusually dense because it is composed of a high percentage of metal. The metal is concentrated in a comparatively huge core, which accounts for nearly 75 percent of Mercury's diameter.
Appearance from Earth Mercury can be seen from Earth without a telescope. It always appears close to the Sun (within about 28 angular degrees). For this reason, the planet can only be seen near the horizon. At certain times of the year it appears as a “morning star” just before sunrise, while at other times it appears as an “evening star” just after sunset.
Because Mercury's orbit lies between Earth's orbit and the Sun, Mercury displays phases like those of the Moon and the planet Venus. These phases can only be seen with the aid of a telescope. Mercury sometimes looks like a crescent to observers on Earth. At other times, when Mercury and Earth are in different positions, more of the sunlight reflected off Mercury can be seen from Earth. Mercury then appears as a half or fuller disk.
- Five separate images were combined to show Mercury crossing in front of the Sun during a type of …
Orbit and Spin On average, Mercury orbits the Sun at a distance of nearly 36 million miles (58 million kilometers). Like all the planets, it travels around the Sun in an elliptical (oval-shaped) orbit. Mercury's orbit is the most eccentric, or elongated, of all the planets. Its orbit is also the most tilted. The plane of Mercury's orbit is tipped about 7 degrees relative to the ecliptic, or the plane of Earth's orbit. Mercury completes one orbit around the Sun about every 88 Earth days. In other words, one year on Mercury lasts some 88 Earth days.
The planet was named after the ancient Roman god Mercury, the counterpart of the ancient Greek god Hermes. Like Hermes, the swift-footed messenger of the gods, the planet Mercury is known for the speed with which it moves across the sky. The planet circles the Sun at an average rate of about 30 miles (48 kilometers) per second, the fastest of the eight planets.
Although Mercury moves along its orbit very quickly, it spins slowly. It takes almost 59 Earth days to complete one rotation about its axis. Mercury rotates on its axis only three times for every two revolutions it makes around the Sun. The combination of a slow spin and a fast orbit leads to an unusual situation. A day on Mercury—the time it takes for the Sun to appear straight overhead, to set, and then to rise straight overhead again—lasts about 176 Earth days. So on Mercury a day is twice as long as a year.
This characteristic, combined with Mercury's highly eccentric orbit, creates some strange effects. The planet's distance from the Sun varies greatly as it travels along its orbit. The farthest Mercury gets from the Sun is about 43 million miles (70 million kilometers). At that point in the planet's orbit, an observer on Mercury would see the Sun appear about twice as large as it does from Earth. The closest Mercury gets to the Sun is some 29 million miles (46 million kilometers). The Sun would at that point appear some three times as large as it does from Earth. Even more unusually, the Sun would not seem to move steadily across Mercury's sky. Its apparent speed would change depending on the viewer's location on the planet and on the planet's distance from the Sun. The Sun would sometimes even appear to briefly reverse its course.
Mercury's spin axis is very nearly perpendicular, or upright, relative to its plane of orbit. By comparison, Earth's axis is tilted almost 24 degrees. This inclination is the main reason there are seasons on Earth. Because Mercury's axis is not tilted, it does not have Earth-like seasons. (See also planet, “Years, days, and seasons.”)
Atmosphere, Surface, and Interior Atmosphere Unlike the other planets, Mercury has no significant atmosphere, or surrounding layers of gases. At Mercury's surface, the pressure—the force exerted by the atmosphere—is less than one trillionth that at Earth's surface. Mercury's extremely tenuous layer of gases includes atoms of helium, hydrogen, oxygen, and sodium. The gases do not remain near the planet long before the Sun's heat blasts them away. They are replenished partly by the solar wind, the flow of charged particles from the Sun. Other gases come from asteroids and comets and from the planet's surface.
Mercury has a magnetic field similar in form to Earth's. However, Mercury's magnetic field is much weaker, at only about 1 percent the strength of Earth's.
Temperatures on Mercury vary widely. Its closeness to the Sun makes it a broiling-hot world by day, with daytime surface temperatures exceeding 800° F (430° C) at parts of the planet. Because Mercury lacks a thick atmosphere to trap heat, however, the planet cools greatly at night. The temperature can drop to about − 300° F (− 180° C) just before dawn. The average surface temperature is about 332° F (167° C).
Surface
- A steep cliff called the Vostok scarp cuts across two craters on the surface of Mercury, as shown …
Between the planet's heavily cratered regions are areas of flat and gently rolling plains with fewer craters. Elsewhere there are smooth, flat plains with very few craters. Volcanic lava flows might have smoothed the surfaces of these plains.
- The Caloris impact basin, shown in a mosaic of images captured by the Mariner 10 spacecraft during …
- The side of Mercury directly opposite the Caloris impact basin has an area of oddly contorted and …
- Discovery Rupes Scarp is one of many long, curving cliffs that are thought to have formed when …
Interior Like Earth, Mercury has three separate layers: a metallic core at the center, a middle rocky layer called a mantle, and a thin rocky crust. In both planets, the core is made mostly of iron. However, Mercury's core is proportionally much larger than Earth's. The core takes up about 42 percent of Mercury's volume, compared with only about 16 percent for Earth. This accounts for Mercury's great density.
Observation and Exploration
- Although Mercury is the planet closest to the Sun, water ice may exist near the poles in craters …
The planet's nearness to the Sun also presents challenges for space probes, which must contend with great heat and the enormous pull of the Sun's gravity. A spacecraft needs a lot of energy in order to enter into orbit around Mercury.
Much of the information known about Mercury comes from images and data transmitted by the Mariner 10 spacecraft, the first to visit the planet. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) launched the craft in November 1973 toward Venus for the initial leg of its mission. Mariner 10 became the first spacecraft to use a “gravity assist,” drawing on Venus' gravitational field to boost its speed and divert its course toward Mercury. It captured the first close-up photographs of Mercury in March 1974. Mariner 10 encountered Mercury twice more. Its final and closest pass, in March 1975, brought it to within 200 miles (325 kilometers) of the surface.
- NASA technicians carefully lift the Messenger spacecraft in order to move it to a prelaunch testing …
Additional references about Mercury
- Elkins-Tanton, L.T.The Sun, Mercury, and Venus(Chelsea House, 2006)
- Miller, Ron.Mercury and Pluto(Twenty-First Century Books, 2003)
- Spangenburg, Ray, and Moser, Kit.A Look at Mercury(Watts, 2003)
- Strom, R.G., and Sprague, A.L.Exploring Mercury: The Iron Planet(Springer, 2003)