Earth zamin (#) Fr.: terre The third planet from the Sun. At → perihelion, it is 147,099,590 km
from the Sun, and at → aphelion it is 152,096.150 km, whereas its
mean distance from the Sun (→ astronomical unit) is
149,598 × 106 km.
Its orbital period is 365.2563 days (→ sidereal year)
and its → eccentricity 0.017. Other characteristics:
→ axial inclination 23.44°; rotation period 23.934 h
(→ sidereal day); mean density 5.52 g/cm3;
mass 5.974 × 1024 kg; → escape velocity 11.18 km/s; average
→ albedo 0.37. The Earth’s atmosphere consists of 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen and 0.9% argon, plus
carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and other gases in much smaller quantities.
The atmospheric pressure at sea level is about 1,000 mbar. The surface average temperature is
15° C, but it varies, on the average, between -50° C (winter, Siberia) and
up to + 40° C (summer, Sahara). Liquid water covers 71% of the surface. Over 5,000 active
volcanoes have been registered throughout man’s known history. The
outer layer of the planet, the → lithosphere, is covered
with the → crust. In the → upper mantle
and beneath the lithosphere, lies → asthenosphere. Etymology (EN): M.E. erthe, from O.E. eorðe “ground, soil, dry land;” cf. O.N. jörð, M.Du. eerde, O.H.G. erda, Goth. airþa; from PIE base *er-. Etymology (PE): Zamin, variant zami “earth, floor, land,” Mid.Pers. zamig,
Av. zam- “the earth;”
cf. Skt. ksam- “the ground, earth;” Gk. khthôn, khamai
“on the ground;” L. homo “earthly being” (as in homo sapiens, |