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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a large planet of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a significant or notable planet in a specific context, such as astronomy or science fiction.
Example: "In our solar system, Jupiter is a large planet of immense size and fascinating features."
Alternatives: "a massive planet in" or "a significant planet within".
Exact(1)
Such small steps from the bottom hardly seem up to saving a large planet of divergent interests.
Similar(59)
If there is a large planet toward the edge of the Solar System, said the scientist, John Anderson of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, it must be traveling in an elongated orbit nearly at a right angle to the orbits of the other planets.
Another hypothesis suggests that its orbit may be evidence for a large planet beyond the orbit of Neptune.
It's akin to astronomers measuring the size of a large planet that cannot be directly observed through the effects of its gravitational pull.
It could be a mile, or hundreds of miles, in diameter, but to be dense enough to have survived the explosive demise and subsequent evolution of its host star, it likely was part of a large planet with a wider more distant orbit.
This is less likely to happen to such a body if it is the moon of a large planet, so moons may survive preferentially.
If collisions are what is producing the hot dust around Zeta Lep, then the gravity of a large planet must already be stirring things up.
These unusual planets, though, were quickly overshadowed by the discovery of a large planet orbiting 47 Ursae Majoris at a more distant 200 million miles (around 320 million kilometers).
No other explanation made sense until they tested the idea of a large planet with an "anti-aligned" orbit, one whose closest approach to the sun is directly opposite that of the other eight solar system planets.
However, the presence of a large planet with a highly elliptical orbit in proximity to Epsilon Eridani's habitable zone reduces the likelihood of a terrestrial planet having a stable orbit within the habitable zone.
There is a gap between 4 and 13 AU, which appears to contain a large planet around 20 times the mass of Jupiter, although further examination of the disk profile indicates it might be a more massive object such as a brown dwarf or more than one planet.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com