https://youtu.be/SumDHcnCRuU?si=m754GmauMaaimoRw
CGP Grey on that subject <3
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https://youtu.be/SumDHcnCRuU?si=m754GmauMaaimoRw
CGP Grey on that subject <3
This is awesome and 🤯 at the same time.
Right because it goes round so fast. I feel like this is somehow misleading tho, to be real
Sort of, basically because mercury has the small orbit it spends the most time closer on average to any other planet. The CGP Grey video someone else posted is a really good explanation as to what's going on.
I mean, I think you basically cut the explanation to a single sentence.
Excellent work optimising efficiency in the pipeline srgnt 🫡
Carry on soldier 🫡
Thanks! I still def recommend checking out the video. It's a really fascinating topic.
I'd already saved it to my watch list. It sounded really interesting, I'll get around to it eventually 👍
I don't think it's misleading. I think a lot of people who think of Mars as the closest don't realize that it's only close once every 2 years or so and unimaginably far away on average (further than Mercury).
when it is the furthest from earth, it is the least further
He doesn’t go far, that mercury fella
He doesn't go too far enough! 😆
Neither too far nor too near
The least wiggle
What about if you add the sun into the equation?
If you take the sun out of the equation, the planets fly apart in all directions. Hope that helps ;)
I mean would the planets be closer to mercury or the sun on average
By the reasoning given for why Mercury is the closest for each planet, the Sun is the closest object for each planet, on average, excluding satellites of the planets.
I would agree but unsure because there are the intricacies of orbit cycles and timings and the 3d plane of space
I mean, the Solar System isn't all that 3D. Inside of the Oort Cloud, almost every notable object is on or close to the ecliptic
I don't think that would help, I quite like our relative location.