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