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20 Interesting Space Facts

The immensity of space is quite literally incomprehensible. The more our technology improves, the more we learn about space and the better we can observe it. Throughout the decades of studying space, we have discovered scientific concepts that were never before even theorized, and proven (or disproven) other theories. The astonishing truth is that no matter how much we’ve been staring at it, we haven’t been able to see more than a tiny bit of the universe itself. If that got your curiosity juices flowing – check out these 20 great space facts:

On a clear night, you can see a whole other galaxy with the naked eye - Andromeda, our closest galactic neighbor (only 2.2 million light years away).

Space Facts
 

The core of a star reaches 16 million degrees Celsius (28,800,000 Fahrenheit). To understand how hot that is, imagine a single grain of sand that is that hot - it would be enough to kill anything around it in a 150 km (95 miles) radius.

Space Facts
 

Combine all the planets, moons, comets and asteroids in the solar system and you'll reach 0.14% of the mass of the sun alone.

Space Facts
 

If you were staring at Jupiter in the last 200 years, you'd be able to see a giant "eye" moving across it. That "eye" is actually a storm, about 40,000 Km (24,850 miles) in diameter. And if you need some perspective - the Earth would fit in that storm 3 times.

Space Facts
 

Since there is no atmosphere on the moon, nothing other than the occasional space-rock disturbs its surface. That means that the footprints left by the Apollo 11 astronauts back in 1969 are still there.

Space Facts
 

Even though it's smaller than Earth, Mars is the home of the solar system's largest volcano, named Olympus Mons (Mount Olympus). The mountain is 60 Km (37 miles) wide and 21 Km (13 miles) in height, making it roughly the size of Ireland...

Space Facts
 

Officially, only 3 people have died outside of Earth's atmosphere, but there are reports that during the space race, some Russian cosmonauts were lost in space...

Space Facts
 

Jupiter is so big, that even if you take all of the other planets in the solar system and combine them, there will still be space for them 1.5 times over. 

Space Facts
 

The sun produces photon (light particles) all the time. Each photon is produced in the core of the sun, and it takes it 170,000 years to travel to the outer layer of the sun.

Space Facts
 

The same photon will then only need 8 minutes to reach the Earth.

Space Facts
 

Beyond the six visible planets, only two were discovered between 1781 and 1930 (Uranus, Neptune and Pluto). In the last twenty years, we have discovered over a thousand.

Space Facts
 

There is a minor planet (not really a planet) that has an orbit that is almost identical to Earth's, called "Cruithne". It is sometimes incorrectly called "Earth's second moon", but it doesn't really orbit the earth, but rather - the sun.

Space Facts
 

The distance between the Earth and the Moon is so vast, you could fit all of the other planets in the solar system between us and they'll have some room to spare.

Space Facts
 

How do we know the actual distance? Believe it or not, we use a mirror that was left on the Moon by the Apollo 11 astronauts.

Space Facts
 

Scientists discovered a star inside what was once a supernova, caused by the collision of 2 other stars.

Space Facts
 

If you always wondered how big the sun really is, you'll be amazed to know that it is 300,000 times bigger than Earth.

Space Facts
 

Oh, and the sun's outer temperature is 9,941° Fahrenheit (5505° Celsius).

Space Facts
 

The Moon is believed to have been formed by a collision between Earth and an object the size of Mars some 4.5 billion years ago.

Space Facts
 

Our solar system does a full galactic circle (about 100,000 lightyears) once every 200 million years.

Space Facts
 

A neutron star is so dense, that just one tablespoon of it will weigh 10 billion tons!

Space Facts

Want more space?

  1. Earth in True Perspective
  2. The True Scale of the Universe
  3. Interactive Scale Model of the Universe
H/T: thechive.com
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