Humanity has always been fascinated with the wandering stars in the sky, the planets. Ancient astrologists have observed and used the paths of the planets in the sky to time the seasons and to predict the future. Observations of the planets helped J. Kepler to formulate his laws of planetary motion and revolutionize the perception of the world. With the advent of the space age, the planets have been transferred from bright spots in the sky to worlds of their own right that can be explored, in part by using the in situ and remote-sensing tools of the geosciences. The terrestrial planets are of particular interest to the geoscientist because comparison with our own planet allows a better understanding of our home, the Earth. Venus offers an example of a runaway greenhouse that has resulted in what we would call a hellish place. With temperatures of around 450C and a corrosive atmosphere that is also optically nontransparent, Venus poses enormous difficulties to spacecraft exploration. Mars is a much friendlier planet to explore but a planet where greenhouse effects and atmospheric loss processes have resulted in a cold and dusty desert. But aside from considerations of the usefulness of space exploration in terms of understanding Earth, the interested mind can visit astounding and puzzling places. There is the dynamic atmosphere of Jupiter with a giant thunderstorm that has been raging for centuries. There is Saturn with its majestic rings and there are Uranus and Neptune wit complicated magnetic fields. These giant planets have moons that are similarly astounding. There is the
volcanic satellite of Jupiter, Io that surpasses the Earth, and any other terrestrial planet in volcanic activity and surface heat flow. This activity is powered by tides that twist the satellite such that its interior partially melts. A much smaller moon of Saturn, Enceladus, also has geysers that could be powered by tidal heating. Its volcanic activity releases water vapor not lava. There is another moon of Saturn, Titan, that hides its surface underneath a layer of photochemical smog in a thick nitrogen atmosphere and there are moons of similar sizes that lack any comparable atmosphere. Miranda, satellite of Uranus, appears as if it has been ripped apart and reassembled. Triton, a satellite of Neptune, has geysers of nitrogen powered by solar irradiation. Magnetic field data suggest that icy moons orbiting the giant planets may have oceans underneath thick ice covers.These oceans can, at least in principle, harbor or have harbored life. Moreover, there are asteroids with moons and comets that may still hold the clues to how the solar system and life on Earth formed. This volume of the Treatise on Geophysics discusses fundamental aspects of the science of the planets. It is focused on geophysical properties of the Earth-like planets and moons, those bodies that consist largely of rock, iron, and water, and the processes occurring in their interiors and on their surfaces. But it goes further by discussing the giant planets and their satellites as well. The better part of the volume is dedicated to the interior structure and evolution of the terrestrial planets and to their physical properties such as gravity and magnetic fields, rotation and surface–atmosphere interactions. What is the planetological context of life?