What If All the Planets Doubled in Size?
Solar System
Doubling the radius of every
planet in the Solar System would make each of them eight times more massive.
But you wouldn't need to worry about our Solar System’s great ball of fire
getting bigger and hotter.
For the sake of this experiment,
let's keep the Sun the same size it already is. But could the gravitational
pull of a super-Jupiter kisk start a chain of events that would result in the
destruction of the Solar System? But before we go further down that chain, let's
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MERCURY
At its current size, the
rocky planet closest to the Sun is only slightly larger than our Moon. Doubling
it in size would make it nearly half as massive as Earth. And despite the fact
that Mercury stopped being volcanically active 3.5 billion years ago, expanding
its interior would mean all that internal energy would need to escape
somewhere. So there could be some more explosive volcanic eruptions in
Mercury’s future.
Venus is very similar in size to Earth. But one of its many differences is that its atmosphere is so thick that the surface pressure is 95 times stronger than our own. Venus’ increased gravity would pull the atmosphere even closer to its surface. This could result in the atmosphere becoming so dense that walking through it would feel more like walking through water. Except you’d really be walking through incredibly thick carbon dioxide.
Earth
If Earth expanded to twice its size, the first big change you’d notice is that you’d feel a lot heavier. Within seconds, you’d go from your 75 kg (165 lb) weight to feeling like you were 150 kg (330 lb). That would be because the force of gravity pulling on you would be twice as strong. You better hit the gym to strengthen up fast because this wouldn’t be easy on your body. Your heart would need to work twice as hard to pump blood around, and pressure would build up on your joints. Jumping, flying or sending rockets into space could become a thing of the past.
You’d need much more fuel, power and money to leave Earth’s surface and travel through its even thicker atmosphere.
Mars
Now, if the red planet ballooned to twice its size, there’s a chance you would barely recognize it. What was once a dry, desolate place could eventually transform into a more Earth-like planet with oceans, rivers and a thick atmosphere.
Mars lost its magnetic field and
then its atmosphere, likely because of chemical changes inside its core. But if
the Martian core got bigger and hotter, it could restart the magnetic field. And
that, in turn, would protect Mars from solar winds and give it a chance at
kick-starting life.
Doubled in size, Jupiter would
continue to be an intimidatingly huge planet. It would stay 318 times larger
than Earth, and 2.5 times more massive than all the other planets combined. And
the impact of this would be so huge that it would likely shift the actual
center of our Solar System. You see, all the planets in our Solar System don't
exactly revolve around the Sun. No, they orbit the common center of mass, or
barycenter.
And thanks to Jupiter’s normal size, this
barycenter is actually 48,000 km (30,000 mi) away from the center of the Sun. But
doubled up, this point in space would move even further away from the Sun.
You’d see material from the asteroid belt being pulled toward Jupiter, or further out into the Solar System. But even this big, Jupiter wouldn’t be massive enough to become a full-blown star. To do that, it would need to increase to 85 times its current mass. Though it wouldn’t be far off from star status. At thirteen times its original mass, Jupiter could become a brown dwarf star.
Saturn
With a bigger Saturn, you could kiss its beautiful rings goodbye. The monumental increase in the planet’s surface gravity would upset the balance of the ring materials, as well as Saturn’s five small moons. They'd start falling toward its surface at a higher rate. Saturn is already slowly losing its rings. Every 30 minutes, material containing enough water to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool falls down to the planet.
URANUS
Now, beyond its added heft, not all that much would change for the ice giant Uranus way out on the edges of the Solar System. It would continue holding the record for the stinkiest planet. If doubling Uranus' size would mean doubling the amount of hydrogen sulfide in its upper atmosphere, this stinker might spread an even stronger stench of rotten eggs.
Neptune
I wouldn't go near this plane. Neptune's fate wouldn't be too different from its giant frozen neighbor.
Except Neptune’s increased
gravitational pull could eventually lead to the disappearance of some or all of
the billions of icy objects located outside its orbit.
Neptune has already swallowed the equivalent of 7 to 10 times the mass of Earth in material from the Kuiper Belt.
Pluto
If Pluto doubled in size, it could be back on track to regain its official
status as a planet. If its added mass and gravity could manage to pull away debris
from its surrounding neighborhood, it might just be able to rejoin the rest of
the family.
Alright, so it’s safe to say that all the planets doubling in size wouldn’t exactly bring about a cataclysmic end of the Solar System. It would, however, cause a little chaos. But not nearly as much as if the Sun became big enough to swallow Earth. But, that’s a story for another WHAT IF.
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