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Planetes (Japanese: プラネテス, Puranetesu; Ancient Greek: Πλάνητες Planētes, "Wanderers") [2] is a Japanese hard science fiction manga written and illustrated by Makoto Yukimura. It was serialized in Kodansha 's seinen manga magazine Morning between January 1999 to January 2004, with its chapters collected into four tankōbon ...
The ISPV 7 Staff only appear in the anime. Claire Rondo. Voiced by: Kumiko Watanabe (Japanese); Lia Sargent (English) A member of the Control Section, a combination of mission control and air traffic control for spacecraft around or based in the ISPV 7 Space Station.
The music of Planetes is a mixture of traditional orchestral music, supplemented by chorals, several uses of a theremin, and traditional Japanese woodwinds (e.g. Shakuhachi). The music score was composed by Kōtarō Nakagawa and produced by Victor Entertainment.
These are lists of planets.A planet is a large, rounded astronomical body that is neither a star nor its remnant. The best available theory of planet formation is the nebular hypothesis, which posits that an interstellar cloud collapses out of a nebula to create a young protostar orbited by a protoplanetary disk.
According to Plutarch and Stobaeus, the term planeta was in use by the time of Anaximander, in the early sixth century BC. [1] The relative positions of the planets, which in the reckoning of Democritus included the Sun and Moon, was the subject of debate, as was their number; in Timaeus, Plato counts only the five still regarded as astronomical planets, excluding the Sun and Moon.
The eight planets of the Solar System with size to scale (up to down, left to right): Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune (outer planets), Earth, Venus, Mars, and Mercury (inner planets)
The Solar System [d] is the gravitationally bound system of the Sun and the objects that orbit it. [11] It formed about 4.6 billion years ago when a dense region of a molecular cloud collapsed, forming the Sun and a protoplanetary disc.
Motion interpolation of seven images of the HR 8799 system taken from the W. M. Keck Observatory over seven years, featuring four exoplanets. This is a list of extrasolar planets that have been directly observed, sorted by observed separations.