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This is a documentation subpage for User:Davidbuddy9/Planet radius. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original user template page. |
The system implemented here goes by present larger/smaller of the object your are comparing it to for example Kepler-22b has a radius of 2.4 R⊕ aka it is 240%. An Earth Analog with the same Radius would be 100%. An object smaller than Earth such as KOI-6863.01 which has a radius of 0.937 (But since we can have only 3 digits we must round so its actually 0.94) would be 094 the zero is required. An Easy way to remember this is to just remove the decimal.
Also note:
{{User:Davidbuddy9/Planet_radius | align = right | Exoplanet = CoRoT-7 b | radius = 015 }}
{{User:Davidbuddy9/Planet_radius | align = right | base = Neptune | Exoplanet = CoRoT-7 b | radius = 044 }}
{{User:Davidbuddy9/Planet_radius | align = right | base = Terre | Exoplanet = CoRoT-7 b | radius = 168 }}
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