Environmental Sciences, asked by krishnagupta4900, 1 year ago

How do inner planets differ from outer planets?

Answers

Answered by ifrahxyz
0

Hey!

Inner planets tend to be smaller, are solid, and have few moons whereas outer planets are typically larger, made of gas, and have multiple moons and rings around them.

Explanation:

The inner planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. The outer planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. (Pluto is no longer considered a planet.)

Inner planets:

1. Smaller than the outer planets

2. Solid (and therefore dense)

3. Few moons

4. No rings

Outer planets:

1. Larger

2. Made up of gas (and therefore less dense than inner planets)

3. Multiple moons compared to the inner planets

4. Rings encircling them

THx!

Answered by jaydip1118
0

Answer:

A planets whose orbit lies outside the asteroid belt

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