powderskye
powderskye
77 / 14
19th Jul 2016
17th Oct 2018
A small solar system model with a LIFE Sun. Includes the planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, the Asteroid Belt, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. All handmade by me. Took a total time of 20 minutes to make. Distances and sizes not to scale.
solarsystem neptune uranus saturn jupiter mars earth venus mercury planet

Comments

  • natstar
    natstar
    24th Mar 2018
    @Electro999 Read the damn description. "Distances and sizes not to scale."
  • Electro999
    Electro999
    10th Feb 2018
    erm ceres is a little bit to big.....its bigger thaan mars and pluto when it should be much smaller XD
  • Sanpypr0
    Sanpypr0
    9th Dec 2017
    also can you add the oort cloud, or even adding proxima centauri
  • Sanpypr0
    Sanpypr0
    9th Dec 2017
    can you add ceres? it is the largest thing in the asteroid belt, and is the only cis-neptunian dwarf planet afaik
  • powderskye
    powderskye
    9th Dec 2017
    heck yeah, I am noticed! thx everyone! :D
  • catmaster
    catmaster
    9th Oct 2017
    WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOW =D +909090909090 lol
  • KDUK2
    KDUK2
    26th Sep 2017
    your logo= awesome. the space= cool. club= you are the 3rd leader on the club
  • powderskye
    powderskye
    26th Sep 2017
    Sedna, on the other hand, is a dwarf planet about 1.5 times the size of Pluto. The average distance away from the Sun is 76 AU. Its orbit is tilted on a plane of about 14 degrees. The average orbital period of Sedna is about 8,000 Earth years.
  • powderskye
    powderskye
    26th Sep 2017
    The closest point it gets to the sun is about 200 times the distance from Earth to the Sun. The farthest away it can get is 1,200 times the distance from Earth to the Sun. (The distance between Earth and the Sun is called an Astronomical Unit, or AU for short.) Planet Nine has an orbital period of about 15,000 Earth years.
  • powderskye
    powderskye
    26th Sep 2017
    @hampsterdance Planet Nine is a hypothetical gas giant planet with about ten times the mass of Earth. It would explain the eccentric orbits of many outer-solar-system objects.