Mercury’s diameter is 3,030 miles (4,878 km), comparable to the size of the continental United States. This makes it about two-fifths the size of Earth. It is smaller than Jupiter’s moon Ganymede and Saturn’s moon Titan.

          But it’s not going to stay that size; the tiny planet is shrinking. When NASA’s Mariner 10 spacecraft visited the planet in the 1970s, it identified unusual features known as scarps that suggest the world is shriveling. As the hot interior of the planet cools, the surface draws together. Since the planet boasts only a single rocky layer, rather than the myriad tectonic plates found on Earth, it pushes on itself to create scarps.

          A 2014 study of nearly 6,000 scarps taken by NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft suggest that Mercury contracted radially as much as 4.4 miles (7 kilometers) since its birth 4.5 billion years ago. The discovery helped balance models of the planet’s interior evolution with observations at its surface.

          “These new results resolved a decades-old paradox between thermal history models and estimates of Mercury’s contraction,” Paul Byrne, a planetary geologist and MESSENGER visiting investigator at Carnegie’s Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, said in a statement. “Now the history of heat production and loss and global contraction are consistent.”

          The planet has a mean radius of 1,516 miles (2,440 km), and its circumference at the equator is 9,525 miles (15,329 km). Some planets, such as Earth, bulge slightly at the equator due to their rapid rotation. However, Mercury turns so slowly on its axis that astronomers once thought that the planet was tidally locked, with one side constantly facing the nearby sun. In fact, the planet spins on its axis once every 58.65 Earth days. Mercury orbits once every 87.97 Earth days, so it rotates only three times every two Mercury years. The slow spin keeps the planet’s radius at the poles and the equator equal.

          Although mercury is the second smallest planet in the Solar System, it is heavier than Mars, and almost as heavy as Earth. The reason for this is that Mercury has an enormous core of iron —almost 3600km (2237 miles) in diameter.