The Eight Planets

Earth is one of eight planets orbiting our Sun. This 90-second narrated lesson takes kids on a quick tour of the whole solar system, from Mercury to Neptune. Includes a quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🪐 The Eight Planets
Earth is not alone in space.Earth???

Earth is our home — but we're not alone. Drifting around our Sun, there are seven other huge worlds, each completely different. Some are tiny and rocky like ours. Some are giants made of gas. Together they're called the planets of the solar system.

What is the solar system?

The solar system is the Sun and everything that orbits around it — including the eight planets, their moons, the asteroid belt, comets, and dwarf planets like Pluto. The Sun's gravity holds it all together. Without the Sun's pull, every planet would fly off into deep space.

The eight planets, in order

  1. Mercury — closest to the Sun, smallest planet, no atmosphere
  2. Venus — Earth's hot twin, covered in thick clouds
  3. Earth — our home, the only one with known life
  4. Mars — the red planet, has the biggest volcano in the solar system
  5. Jupiter — the giant, has a giant red storm bigger than Earth
  6. Saturn — famous for its bright rings of ice and rock
  7. Uranus — pale blue, spins on its side
  8. Neptune — windiest planet, deep blue, farthest from the Sun

Two families: rocky and gassy

  • Inner rocky planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) — small, made of rock and metal, close to the Sun, few or no moons
  • Outer gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) — huge, made mostly of gas, far from the Sun, have many moons and (in Saturn's case) spectacular rings

Why isn't Pluto a planet anymore?

Until 2006, Pluto was called the ninth planet. But astronomers kept finding other small icy worlds beyond Neptune that were about the same size as Pluto. Rather than calling them all planets, they reclassified Pluto as a dwarf planet. So today the solar system officially has eight planets and several dwarf planets.

A handy memory trick

An easy way to remember the order of planets: My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us Noodles. Each first letter matches a planet in order — Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.

Frequently asked questions

Which is the largest planet?

Jupiter — over 1,300 Earths could fit inside it. Even though it's the largest, it's still much smaller than the Sun.

Which planet has the most moons?

Saturn currently leads with over 140 known moons, closely followed by Jupiter (around 95). New ones are still being discovered.

Why is Mars red?

Mars's surface is covered in a fine dust rich in iron oxide — basically rust. The same chemical that makes old iron tools rusty makes the whole planet look red from far away.

What is the asteroid belt?

A wide ring of small rocky bodies between Mars and Jupiter. There are millions of asteroids in it. They never formed into a planet because Jupiter's huge gravity kept stirring them up.

Could there be life on other planets?

Possibly! Mars once had liquid water, and scientists have found ingredients for life on some moons of Jupiter and Saturn. So far, Earth is the only place where we've actually found life — but the search continues.

How long does it take Earth to go around the Sun?

About 365 and a quarter days — that's exactly one year. The leftover quarter is why we add a 'leap day' (29th February) every four years.

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