Mercury is the planet closest to the Sun in our Solar System. This small, rocky
planet has almost no atmosphere. Mercury has a very elliptical orbit and a huge
range in temperature. During the long daytime (which lasts 58.65 Earth days or
almost an entire Mercurian year, which is 88 days long), the temperature is
hotter than an oven; during the long night (the same length), the temperature is
colder than a freezer.
Mercury
is so close to the Sun that you can only see it near sunrise or sunset.

Craters on the surface of Mercury. |
Mercury is a heavily cratered planet; its surface is
similar to the surface of our
Moon. Cratering on
Mercury triggered volcanic eruptions that filled much of the surrounding area.
Mercury does have a magnetic field (probably generated by a partly-liquid iron
core).
SIZE
Mercury is about 3,031 miles (4,878 km) in diameter. It is the second-smallest
planet in our Solar System (after tiny
Pluto). Mercury is a bit
over one third of the diameter of the Earth. Mercury is only slightly larger
than the Earth's
moon.
MASS AND GRAVITY
Mercury's mass is about 3.3 x 1023 kg. This is
about 1/20th of the mass of the Earth.
The gravity on Mercury is 38% of the gravity on Earth. A 100 pound person would
weigh only 38 pounds on Mercury. To calculate your weight on Mercury, just
multiply your weight by 0.38 (or go the
planetary weight calculator)
ATMOSPHERE
Mercury's thin atmosphere consist of trace amounts of
hydrogen and
helium. The atmospheric
pressure is only about 1 x 10-9 millibars;
this is a tiny fraction (about 2 trillionths) of the atmospheric pressure on
Earth.
Since the atmosphere is so slight, the sky would appear pitch black (except for
the sun, stars, and other planets, when visible), even during the day. Also,
there is no "greenhouse effect" on Mercury. When the sun sets, the temperature
drops very quickly since the atmosphere does not help retain the heat.
MERCURY'S ORBIT AND DISTANCE FROM THE SUN
Mercury is closest planet to our Sun and the fastest moving planet in our Solar
System.
Mercury is just over a third as far from the sun as the
Earth is; it is 0.387 A.U. from the sun (on average). Mercury's orbit is very
eccentric; at aphelion (the point in the orbit farthest from the sun) Mercury is
70 million km from the sun, at perihelion Mercury is 46 million km from the sun.
There are no seasons on Mercury. Seasons are caused by
the tilt of the axis relative to the planet's orbit. Since Mercury's axis is
directly perpendicular to its motion (not tilted), it has no seasons.
If you were on the surface of Mercury, the Sun would
look almost three times as big as it does from Earth!
TEMPERATURE RANGE
Mercury has a huge range in temperatures. Its surface ranges in temperature from
-270°F to 800°F (-168°C to 427°C). During the very long daytime (88 Earth-days
long), the temperatures are very high (the second-highest in the Solar System -
only
Venus is hotter); during
the long night, the thin atmosphere lets the heat dissipate, and the temperature
drops quickly.
MOONS
Mercury has no moons.
MERCURY-EARTH COMPARISONS