Our Earth is still the only planet capable of sustaining life in the solar system. Even Mars – the planet recently confirmed to have liquid water on its surface – does not have this ability. And according to calculations, even equipped with the most modern equipment today, humans can only live up to 68 days on the Red Planet.
But try to be “fictional” a bit. Suppose one day you get the “miracle door” of the robotic cat Doraemon and then accidentally “open the wrong” to any planet in the solar system, what is your chance of survival?
Surely you don’t need to think too much, right? The core of the Sun has a temperature of about… 15 million degrees Celsius, and the surface temperature is a bit “cooler” – about 10 million degrees Celsius.
With such extreme temperatures, whether you are at the surface or the core, it will evaporate within a split second. So if you accidentally “lost” here, you must apologize, you are too… black.
Mercury is the planet closest to the Sun, but because it has no atmosphere , the temperature of this planet only falls between… 173 to 427 degrees Celsius.
However, this is also a rather strange planet in the solar system. This planet has a very slow rotation rate – about 175.97 Earth days. As a result, Mercury will be partly out of contact with the Sun, with temperatures falling around minus 173 degrees Celsius.
So if “lucky” falls in the intersection between the hot and cold areas, you can completely survive if… don’t need to breathe. The maximum time a person can hold their breath is 5 minutes, but most people can only hold their breath for 2 minutes.
And since we’re “fictitious”, 2 minutes is more than enough for you to return to Earth through the magic door, right?
Venus is not as close to the Sun as Mercury, but if you get lost here, my condolences, you will die instantly.
The reason is because Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system , with a temperature of about 482 degrees Celsius. You just imagine walking up here is like walking into a pizza oven but with hot temperatures. more than one and a half times.
It’s quite interesting that Venus has a relatively similar gravity to Earth, so you won’t feel much difference if… not burned up.
If you are “naughty” and still on Earth, you are very lucky. Unless you fall into a volcano, go to the middle of the ocean, or fall to the top of Everest, you will still live at least 75 years old (according to the average life expectancy of Vietnamese people).
Mars’ climate is quite extreme – with daytime temperatures at the equator that can range from minus 73 degrees Celsius to… 20 degrees Celsius.
However, due to the very thin atmosphere , with most of it CO2 , the cold here is not so bad… cutting your skin and you won’t die right away if you get lost in the cold area of the Red Planet. .
So like Mercury, you will have about 2 – 5 minutes (if you are a good breath holder) to return to Earth.
Falling on Jupiter is as “dirty” as opening the door to visit the Sun.
This is because Jupiter – despite being the largest in the solar system – has no surface . It’s a gas giant, mostly hydrogen and helium. If you fall here, you will no longer have the opportunity to return but “go forever and never return” , until you are crushed by the pressure inside the planet’s core.
Regardless of the gas clouds, giant tornadoes with winds of up to 1800 km / h, appearing regularly on Saturn’s surface will turn any living entities that appear to “cosmic dust” while still alive. without blinking.
Uranus’s atmosphere is essentially a mixture of water vapor, ammonia, and methane, the same elements that give the planet its characteristic blue color. In fact, we can’t calculate how long it will last when you land on Uranus, because your body will be dissolved in its atmosphere almost immediately.
The time for humans to exist on Neptune is probably less than a second, because of the impact of a series of factors, especially super strong winds, whose speeds even surpass sound.