superior planet

IPA/suːpˈiəɹɪə plˈanɪt/
IPA/suːpˈiəɹɪɚ plˈænɪt/

superior planet — noun

1. In astronomy, a planet whose orbit around the Sun is farther from the Sun than E

1.名詞C1
釋義

In astronomy, a planet whose orbit around the Sun is farther from the Sun than Earth's own orbital path; in our solar system, the five superior planets are Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

例句

Mars is a superior planet: its orbit around the Sun lies farther out than Earth's.

be classified as a superior planet

Superior planets are visible at any night hour, unlike inferior planets which stay close to the Sun.

contrast with inferior planet

同義詞
  • outer planet

    Often used interchangeably in casual contexts, but technically 'outer planet' usually excludes Mars and refers only to the gas and ice giants beyond the asteroid belt.

反義詞
  • inferior planet

    A planet whose orbit lies inside Earth's orbit — Mercury and Venus are the only inferior planets in our solar system.

文法句型

be classified as a superior planet

superior planet + verb (orbits, appears)

用法筆記

The word 'superior' here means 'farther from the Sun' (not 'better'). This term is mainly used when comparing planetary visibility or orbital positions. The opposite term is 'inferior planet' (Mercury and Venus). Among amateur astronomers, the phrase is less common than simply naming the planet, but it appears regularly in textbooks and exam questions about the solar system.

常見錯誤

Superior planets are better planets than inferior ones.
Superior planets orbit the Sun at a greater distance than Earth does.
💡In astronomy, 'superior' refers to orbital position, not quality.