University-level astronomy infographic showing the Sun and all 8 planets in a horizontal comparison layout with labeled facts, orbital distance cues, and clear not-to-scale notes. Designed in a retro 1960s space age poster style with a dark cosmic palette, vintage scientific typography, and clean editorial linework, this astrodienst current planets visual is ideal for educational and brand content.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Astronomy infographic titled "Solar System Planets Compared" — COMPARISON of cosmic scales. Create a university-level astronomy infographic comparing the 8 planets of the Solar System in a horizontal size-and-position overview, with the Sun included as a contextual reference element at one side. Main composition: planets arranged in order from the Sun as Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, with clear comparative sizing and orbital-distance cues. Explicitly include the label "Not to scale" for planetary distances and also note that relative diameters are simplified for readability. Use scientifically reasonable colors and appearances: Mercury gray and cratered, Venus pale yellow cloud cover, Earth blue-white with continents/clouds, Mars rusty red, Jupiter banded tan-orange with Great Red Spot, Saturn pale gold with prominent rings, Uranus cyan, Neptune deep blue. Add subtle orbital spacing markers or distance bars to reinforce cosmic-scale comparison without implying true scale. Include 8 labeled planetary callouts, each with the object name in canonical scientific form and one accurate fact in English: - "Mercury" — "Diameter: 4,879 km" - "Venus" — "Mean surface temperature: 737 K" - "Earth" — "Mass: 5.97 × 10^24 kg" - "Mars" — "Diameter: 6,779 km" - "Jupiter" — "Mass: 1.898 × 10^27 kg" - "Saturn" — "Equatorial diameter: 120,536 km" - "Uranus" — "Mean distance from Sun: 19.2 AU" - "Neptune" — "Mean distance from Sun: 30.1 AU" Add 1 additional contextual callout for the Sun: - "Sun" — "Diameter: 1,392,700 km" Add small educational labels and comparison captions in English such as "Inner planets", "Gas giants", "Ice giants", and a visible note reading "Planet sizes and distances shown here are not to scale". Include a compact scale-reference strip in English with examples such as: "Earth diameter = 12,742 km", "1 AU = 149.6 million km", "Jupiter mass = 317.8 Earth masses". Design language: retro 1960s space age poster aesthetic, deep cosmic dark palette, muted teal, navy, burnt orange, pale gold, off-white ink, slightly grainy print texture, clean geometric linework, vintage scientific typography, mid-century editorial composition, scholarly but visually striking mood. Use balanced negative space, thin vector orbit lines, icon-like comparison bars, and disciplined infographic hierarchy suitable for university audiences. Include editorial astronomy illustration, dark-mode-friendly cosmic palette, vector-clean infographic layout. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no UFO / pseudoscience imagery, no watermarks Scientifically accurate facts, no UFO / pseudoscience imagery, no astrology framing. Sizes and distances are typically not to true scale — label as such.
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