Earth and Jupiter's planet Our solar system consists of nine planets divided into two categories called Earth's planet and Jupiter's planet. The terrestrial planet consists mainly of rocks and metals. They also usually have high density, low speed rotation, solid surface, acyclic and a few satellites. These planets include Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. On the other hand, Jupiter's planet consists mainly of hydrogen and helium. They usually have low density, high speed rotation, deep atmosphere, ring and numerous satellites.
Unlike the land planet, Jupiter's planet is basically a big balloon. Jupiter's planet seems to be formed at the same time as the Sun nebula. Jupiter and Saturn are inherently closest, Neptune and Uranus have several features. They all have the same characteristics in classification. Jupiter's planet consists mainly of helium and hydrogen. They have a core of liquid or small rock. They are usually high quality and low density. They have many satellites, and the gravity is much stronger than the earth. They also have the same strip and partition style. By giving these properties as defined in each description it is easy to see how planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are like Jupiter or Jupiter.
One way to classify planets in the solar system is to distribute them between land and Jupiter. There are only three satellites between the Earth's planet, Mars, Earth, Venus and Mercury (two on Mars, one on Devil and the other on Earth). In contrast, the planets of Jupiter are full of satellites: the latest statistics include 67 Jupiter, 60 Saturn, 27 Uranus, and 14 Neptune. When NASA 's New Horizon' s spacecraft approached Pluto, it had circled five satellites. Dwarf Planet
The Earth's planet is the four innermost planets of the solar system, Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. They are called land because they have rock surfaces as small as the Earth. Planets, Venus, Earth and Mars all have wonderful atmospheres, but Mercury is rare. The figure below shows the approximate distance from the sun to the planet on the planet. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune are known as Jupiter (Jupiter-like) planets. Because they are huge compared to the Earth and have the same gas character as Jupiter. Jupiter's planet is also known as a giant planet, but some or all of them may have a small solid core. The image below shows the approximate distance between Jupiter's planet and the sun.