
Mesoplanets are planetary bodies with sizes smaller than Mercury but larger than Ceres. The term was coined by Isaac Asimov. Assuming size is defined in relation to equatorial radius, mesoplanets should be approximately 500 km to 2,500 km in radius.[1]
Mesoplanets[]
| Name | System | Affiliation | SED | Habitable | Map |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aero | Terra | No | Link | ||
| Cano I | Cano | No | Link | ||
| Ferron I | Ferron | No | Link | ||
| Genesis I | Genesis | No | Link | ||
| Hades I | Hades | No | Link | ||
| Kiel I | Kiel | No | Link | ||
| Kins I | Kins | No | Link | ||
| Nemo II | Nemo | No | Link | ||
| Oberon V | Oberon | No | Link | ||
| Oretani I | Oretani | No | Link | ||
| Rhetor I | Rhetor | No | Link | ||
| Tohil II | Tohil | No | Link | ||
| Vega I | Vega | No | Link | ||
| Y.ōm'e | Tal | No | Link |
See also[]
References[]
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesoplanet Mesoplanet on wikipedia.org
Artificial planet • Carbon planet • Chthonian planet • Coreless planet • Desert planet • Dwarf planet • Evaporating planet • Gas dwarf • Gas giant • Ice giant • Ice planet • Iron planet • Lava planet • Mesoplanet • Ocean planet • Planetary moon • Protoplanet • Puffy planet • Rogue planet • Smog planet • Super-Earth • Super Jupiter • Terrestrial rocky |