Facts About The Gas Giants
Facts About The Gas Giants
Facts About The Gas Giants
Gas giants are large planets that contain more than 10 times the mass of Earth, they are
also known as the Jovian or Outer Planets. Their compositions are mostly gases, such as
hydrogen, and small amounts of rocky material (mostly at their cores). The four gas giants in
our solar system are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
• The gas and ice giant planets take longer to orbit the Sun because of their great
distances. The farther away they are, the more time it takes to make one trip around
the Sun.
• The densities of the gas giants are much less than the densities of the rocky, terrestrial
worlds of the solar system.
• Gas giants are not all gas. Beneath the heavy atmospheres of these Jupiter and
Saturn are layers of molecular hydrogen and liquid metallic hydrogen.
• Uranus has an icy layer over its solid rock core, and covered with a gaseous
atmosphere. Neptune has a water-ammonia ocean for a mantle overlying its rocky
core.
• The metallic hydrogen layers in Jupiter and Saturn conduct electricity.
• The cores of the gas giants are crushed under tremendously high pressures and they
are very hot (up to 20,000 K), while the cores of the ice giants Uranus and Neptune
are at 5000K and 5,400K respectively.
• Gas giants have been found around more than a thousand stars by the Kepler
mission. These large exoplanets are often referred to by such names as Hot Jupiters,
SuperJupiters, and Giant Neptunes.
ICE GIANTS
An ice giant planet is one that is at least ten times the mass of Earth, and contains a
higher percentage of what planetary scientists refer to as “ices”. These are volatile elements
heavier than hydrogen and helium, and were in ice form (mainly water) when the planets first
formed. In our solar system, Uranus and Neptune are often referred to as “ice giants” due to
the higher amounts of such volatile they contain. Astronomers have also determined that
some exoplanets could be ice giants, as well.
RING SYSTEMS
A ring system around a planet or asteroid is a disk made up of dust, chunks of material
(ice, in the outer solar system), and small moons. This material forms a ring (or rings) around its
parent body. The largest ring system in the solar system is the one around Saturn. Jupiter, Uranus
and Neptune also have rings, and at least one asteroid is known to have a small ring as well.
JUPITER FACTS
The planet Jupiter is the fifth planet out from the Sun, and is two and a half times more
massive than all the other planets in the solar system combined. It is made primarily of gases
and is therefore known as a “gas giant”.
Rings: 4
Jupiter Diagrams
Situated 22° south of Jupiter’s equator, the Great Red Spot is a storm that has been raging for
at least 186 years. In fact, upper estimates suggest that this red and turbulent storm could have been
in existence for over three and a half centuries. A giant red spot was seen on Jupiter in the seventeenth
century, when telescopes first started to be used. However, it is unknown whether this is the same red
spot that we see today, or whether Jupiter has had many such storms that have come and gone as
the centuries pass.
The red spot circulates anticlockwise and takes six (earth) days to rotate completely. Another
mystery surrounding the red spot is what makes it red: scientists have come up with several theories (for
instance, the presence of red organic compounds) but as yet nobody knows for certain. That will be a
question for future astronomy!
Jupiter’s Atmosphere
Jupiter’s atmosphere is special because it is the solar system’s largest planetary atmosphere. It
is made up of hydrogen and helium, in roughly the same proportions as are found in the sun. However,
it also contains much smaller amounts of other space gases, such as ammonia, methane and water.
90% of the atmosphere of Jupiter – a huge proportion – is made of hydrogen. It would be impossible
for humans to breathe in this atmosphere. So, if you are thinking of travelling to space to do some
hands on astronomy research, you would have to wear a breathing suit when visiting this planet.
URANUS FACTS
Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun. While being visible to the naked eye, it was not
recognised as a planet due to its dimness and slow orbit. Uranus became the first planet discovered
with the use of a telescope. Uranus is tipped over on its side with an axial tilt of 98 degrees. It is often
described as “rolling around the Sun on its side.”
Rings: 13
Uranus Diagrams
Similar Facts
Uranus’ Moons & Shakespeare Uranus’ moons are named after characters from the works of William
Shakespeare and Alexander Pope. To date 27 moons have been discovered around Uranus.
Titania Moon Facts Titania is Uranus’ largest moon and is the eighth largest moon in the solar system.
Like many of Uranus’ moons.
Miranda Moon Facts Miranda is the smallest of the rounded satellites of Uranus. It also orbits the closest
of the five larger moons.
NEPTUNE FACTS
Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun making it the most distant in the solar system. This gas
giant planet may have formed much closer to the Sun in early solar system history before migrating to
its present position.
Moons: 14 (Triton)
Rings: 5
Neptune Diagrams
The Great Dark Spot in the southern atmosphere of Neptune was first discovered in 1989 by the
Voyager 2 spacecraft. It was an incredibly large rotating storm system with winds of upto 1,500 miles
per hour, the strongest winds recorded on any planet. How such powerful winds were discovered on
a planet so far from the sun is still considered a mystery to this day.
Data from the Voyager 2 spacecraft also showed that the Great Dark Spot varied significantly
in size during their brief pass of the planet. When Neptune was viewed by the Hubble Space telescope
in 1994 the Great Dark Spot had vanished, although a different dark spot had appeared in Neptune’s
northern hemisphere.
Neptune’s Atmosphere
Neptune has an incredibly thick atmosphere comprised of 74% hydrogen, 25% helium and
approximately 1% methane. Its atmosphere also contains icy clouds and the fastest winds recorded in
the solar system. Particles of icy methane and minor gases in the extremities of the atmosphere give
Neptune its deep blue colour. The striking blue and white features of Neptune also help to distinguish
it from Uranus.
Neptune’s atmosphere is subdivided into the lower troposphere and the stratosphere with the
tropopause being the boundary between the two. In the lower troposphere temperatures decrease
with altitude however they increase with altitude in the stratosphere. Hydrocarbons form hazes of smog
that appear in the entire upper atmosphere of Neptune and hydrocarbon snowflakes that form in
Neptune’s atmosphere melt before they reach its surface due to the high pressure.
SATURN FACTS
Saturn is the sixth Planet from the Sun and the second Largest Planet in the Solar System. It has
seven thin, flat rings and 62 Moons. This planet can be seen by Earth with the naked eye, but the rings
cannot.
Mass 95 Earths
Radius 9.4 Earths
Distance 9.5 AU
Diameter 120,540km
Saturn Diagrams
• Saturn is about nine times Earth's radius and is characterized by large rings; how they formed is
unknown.
• It has 53 known moons and nine more awaiting confirmation, according to NASA. Like Jupiter,
it is mostly made up of hydrogen and helium that surround a dense core and was also tracked
by ancient cultures. Its atmosphere is similar to Jupiter's.
• Saturn was known to the ancients, including the Babylonians and Far Eastern observers. It is
named for the Roman god Saturnus, and was known to the Greeks as Cronus.
• Galileo discovered rings 1610, though believed they were moons on either side. Christian
Huygens first coined “Rings” 1665.
• Saturn is the second-largest planet in the solar system.
• Saturn has many moons and large storms, like Jupiter. Saturn has a thick atmosphere made of
mostly hydrogen and helium. Saturn’s atmosphere also contains storms and clouds, but they
are not as big as Jupiter’s.
• Saturn has thousands of rings around it.
• The rings are made of ice and chunks of rock. Each traveling in its own orbit around Saturn.
Saturn has the most spectacular rings of any planet. Saturn’s rings are broad and thin, like a
CD. Saturn’s largest moon,
• Titan, is larger than the planet Mercury. Four other moons of Saturn are each over 1000
kilometers in diameter.
Reference: https://space-facts.com/gas-giants/