Fortune Telling Collection - Zodiac Guide - Why doesn't the moon belong to the solar system?

Why doesn't the moon belong to the solar system?

The moon is a satellite of the earth, and the earth is a planet of the sun, so the moon does not belong to the solar system.

The moon is the largest satellite known to earth, and its surface is covered with craters formed by the impact of small celestial bodies.

The solar system includes eight planets (from close to the sun to far from the sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune), as well as at least 173 known satellites, five confirmed dwarf planets, hundreds of millions of solar system small bodies and Halley's comet.

Extended information The moon is the first alien object that human beings landed on. 1958 The lunar probes launched by the United States and the former Soviet Union failed. Before 1959, the former Soviet Union and the United States successfully launched the "Moon" and "Pioneer" lunar probes respectively.

1969, America's Apollo-1 1 achieved the first manned landing on the moon, followed by Apollo-12, 14, 15, 16 and/kloc-.

* * * brought back 38 1.7 kg of moon samples to the earth, which greatly increased human understanding of the origin and evolution of the moon. So far, only these 12 American astronauts have landed on celestial bodies outside the earth.

2065438+In April 2008, NASA released a video made from data collected by lunar orbiter. The data in this video was collected by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) for nine years. Since June 2009, the probe has been observing the moon 50 kilometers above the surface of the moon, capturing unprecedented details on the surface of the moon. ?

201910: 261October 3, because Chang' e-4 successfully landed in the pre-selected landing zone near the back of the moon at 177.6 degrees east longitude and 45.5 degrees south latitude, the world's first close-up image of the back of the moon was sent back to Earth through the "Queqiao" relay star, which opened the door. ?

20 19 13, the lunar rover Chang 'e IV was named "Yutu II".

Baidu Encyclopedia-Moon