Mercury is the innermost planet in the Solar System.
It is also the smallest, and its orbit is the most eccentric (that is, the least perfectly
circular) of the eight planets.It orbits the Sun once in about 88 Earth days, completing three rotations about
its axis for every two orbits. The planet is named after the Roman god Mercury, the messenger to the gods.
Mercury's surface is heavily cratered and similar in appearance to Earth's Moon, indicating
that it has been geologically inactive for billions of years. Due to its near
lack of an atmosphere to retain heat, Mercury's surface experiences the
steepest temperature gradient of all the planets, ranging from a very cold 100 K at night to a very hot 700 K during
the day. Mercury's axis has the smallest tilt of any of the Solar System's planets,
but Mercury's orbital eccentricity is the largest. The seasons on the
planet's surface are caused by the variation of its distance from the Sun
rather than by the axial tilt, which is the main cause of seasons on Earth and
other planets. At perihelion,
the intensity of sunlight on Mercury's surface is more than twice the intensity
at aphelion. Because the
seasons of the planet are produced by the orbital eccentricity instead of the
axial tilt, the season does not differ between its two hemispheres.
Because Mercury's orbit lies within Earth's orbit (as does
Venus's), it can appear in Earth's sky either as a morning star or an evening
star. While Mercury can appear as a very bright object when viewed from Earth,
its proximity to the Sun makes it more difficult to see than Venus.
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