Mercury
Object Data
- Catalog Designation
- Mercury
- Type
- Planet
- Constellation
- Solar System
- Magnitude
- -1.9
- Distance
- 57,894,376 light-years
- Angular Size
- 13
About Mercury
Description
Mercury is the smallest planet in the solar system and the closest to the Sun, orbiting at an average distance of just 0.387 AU (58 million km). With a diameter of only 4,879 km — barely larger than Earth's Moon — it is a dense, heavily cratered world with virtually no atmosphere. Its surface temperatures swing wildly from about 430°C on the sunlit side to -180°C on the night side. Mercury's iron core is disproportionately large, making up about 85% of the planet's radius and giving it the second-highest density of any planet after Earth.
Observing Tips
Mercury is the most challenging of the classical planets to observe because it never strays far from the Sun — its maximum elongation is only about 18-28 degrees. Look for it low on the western horizon just after sunset, or low on the eastern horizon just before sunrise, during its greatest elongation periods. The best elongations for northern hemisphere observers occur in spring evenings (March-April) and autumn mornings (September-October). A telescope at 100-200x shows Mercury's phases — like a tiny Venus going through crescent to gibbous — but surface detail is essentially invisible from Earth. Steady seeing at twilight is the main challenge.
History
Known since at least the 3rd millennium BC by the Sumerians. Ancient Greeks initially thought it was two separate objects — Apollo (morning star) and Hermes (evening star) — before realizing they were the same planet around 350 BC. Named after the Roman messenger god due to its swift motion across the sky. Giovanni Zupi observed its phases through a telescope in 1639, confirming it orbits the Sun. Only two spacecraft have visited Mercury: Mariner 10 (1974-75) and MESSENGER (2011-2015), with BepiColombo currently en route.
Fun Facts
A day on Mercury (sunrise to sunrise) lasts 176 Earth days — twice as long as its year of 88 days. This bizarre ratio means that if you stood on Mercury, you would see the Sun rise, slow down, briefly reverse direction in the sky, then continue its path to set. Mercury has shrunk by about 7 km in radius over its history as its enormous iron core cooled, leaving dramatic wrinkle-like scarps across its surface.
Community Photos (1)
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Arizona State University/Carnegie Institution of Washington. License: Public domain. (Wikimedia Commons)
Skybred Feb 28, 2026