The great planets are largely gaseous, consisting mostly of hydrogen and helium, with traces of methane, water and solid matter. Their compositions are inferred indirectly from spectroscopic evidence, because space probes have not penetrated their atmospheres to any great depth. In contrast to the rocky terrestrial planets and the Moon, the radius of a great planet does not correspond to a solid surface, but is taken to be the level that corresponds to a pressure of one bar, which is approximately Earth's atmospheric pressure at sea-level.