Mercury is the innermost planet in the solar system. Since it is the closest to the Sun, Mercury is the most difficult planet to see because it is always seen quite near to the Sun in the sky and the Sun’s glare or the bright sky usually overwhelms the planet’s light.

          The only chance to see it is as a faint “star” in the morning or evening sky near the horizon, shortly before sunrise in the dawn or just after sunset in the dusk. So it has always been almost impossible to get any information about the surface of the planet by means of ground-based observations. The first, detailed images were obtained with the NASA Mariner 10 spacecraft which also procured most of our present information about Mercury’s surface.

          Like our Moon, Mercury is small and its surface is scarred by craters that were formed by impacting rocks and asteroids, soon after the birth of the solar system. They smashed into the planet and blasted the material away from the surface. Mercury also has real cliffs, or scarps which formed when the young cooling planet shrunk like an old apple, with wrinkles on its surface.

          Mercury has the largest day-to-night temperature variation of all planets. The days are burning hot (about 400 °C) and the nights are freezing cold (about -200 °C). This is because it only has a very thin atmosphere.

         Mercury is one of the most heavily scarred objects in the Solar System. Thousands of meteor craters cover the planet, including the largest — the Calories Basin. This was formed when a piece of rock 100km (60 miles) wide collided with Mercury 3.6 billion years ago. Mercury is also shaped by wrinkles and cracks that formed when the surface of the planet cooled and shrank.