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question: why do mercury, venus, earth, and mars lack hydrogen and helium in their atmospheres? answer options: select one of four their gravitational pull is too strong. their masses are too large. their gravitational pull is too weak. they spin too quickly on their axes.
Hydrogen and helium are light gases. A planet's gravitational pull is needed to retain atmospheric gases. Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars have relatively weak gravitational pulls compared to gas giants. Weak gravity can't hold light gases like H and He, so they escape. The other options are incorrect: strong gravity would retain them, mass being large (these planets are smaller than gas giants) doesn't fit, and spin speed doesn't directly relate to retaining light gases.
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C. Their gravitational pull is too weak (assuming the options are labeled A - D as: A. Their gravitational pull is too strong, B. Their masses are too large, C. Their gravitational pull is too weak, D. They spin too quickly on their axes)