...subside into the sun. Once stripped, these portions must be borne outwards, by the radial stream, to the outer verge of the system. Still, there are, no doubt, denser particles of matter, of theaverageatomic density of Mercury and Venus, which can maintain their ground against the rad...
Mercury is the closest planet to our sun. It circles the sun every 88 days, rather than Earth's orbit of 365 days. The surface of Mercury is rocky and resembles that of Earth's moon. It is a dense planet, but not the hottest. ...
That honor goes to Venus, the second closest planet to the Sun which also has the highest average surface temperatures – reaching up to 460 °C on a regular basis. This is due in part to Venus’ proximity to the Sun, being just on the inner edge of the habitability zone, but also t...
The original definition of El Niño goes back to the eighteenth or nineteenth century when Peruvian sailors coined the term to describe a warm southward current that appeared annually near Christmas off the Peruvian coast. Hence the name El Niño, Spanish for "the Child," referring to the Ch...