Table of Contents
What would happen if the planets switched places?
Thus, if we were magically able to instantly switch the places of Earth and Mars, the results would be catastrophic due to their differing masses. On the flip side, Earth would receive half as much sunlight, and thus the planet would freeze over.
Is Earth affected by Jupiter?
There would be minor changes in the planets’ orbits about the Sun, but very little else. However, Jupiter does a great job of shepherding and absorbing small objects in the Solar System. With Jupiter gone, the main effect on Earth would be an increase in the rate of impacts from asteroids and other space flotsam.
What would happen if Jupiter were to collide with the sun?
If Jupiter were mixed throughout the sun, the temperature of the sun would decrease slightly, and perhaps it would take a few hundred years for the sun’s temperature to return to its previous level, and maybe we would get a few basis points less solar radiation, but it wouldn’t go out.
What if the Earth and Sun switched places?
If the Sun and the Earth-Moon system swapped places just now, it would be mayhem. Every other planet would be sucked into the Sun almost instantaneously depending on which side of the orbit they are on, unless they collided with each other in the process and disintegrated.
What planets affect Earth?
Earth’s tides are dominated by the combined effect of the Sun and the Moon’s gravitational pull. But the other planets, since they have a gravitational pull of their own, also have a small effect on the tides. Venus is the strongest because it happens to come closest to Earth.
Does Jupiter affect the sun?
However, Jupiter does not technically orbit the sun — because it’s so dauntingly massive. The gas giant is so big that it pulls the center of mass between it and the sun, also known as the barycenter, some 1.07 solar radii from the star’s center — which is about 30,000 miles above the sun’s surface.