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Neptune

Chapter 7

NEPTUNE FACTS

neptune facts

Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun and is the most distant planet from the Sun. This gas-giant planet may have formed much closer to the Sun early in solar system history before migrating to its present position.

Planet Profile

Mass: 102,410,000,000,000,000 billion kg (17.15x Earth)
Equatorial Diameter: 49,528 km
Polar Diameter: 48,682 km
Equatorial Circumference: 155,600 km
Known Satellites: 14
Notable Satellites: Tritan
Orbit Distance: 4,498,396,441 km (30.10 AU)
Orbit Period: 60,190.03 Earth days (164.79 Earth years)
Surface Temperature: -201 °C
Discover Date: September 23rd 1846
Discovered By: Urbain Le Verrier & Johann Galle

Size Of Neptune Compared To The Earth

Size of Neptune

Facts About Neptune

Neptune was not known to the ancients:
It is not visible to the naked eye and was first observed in 1846. Its position was determined using mathematical predictions. It was named after the Roman god of the sea.

Neptune spins on its axis very rapidly:
Its equatorial clouds take 18 hours to make one rotation. This is because Neptune is not solid body.

Neptune makes one trip around the Sun every 164.8 Earth years:
During some parts of its orbit one or the other of its poles point directly at the Sun and get about 42 years of direct sunlight. The rest of the time they are in darkness.

Neptune is the smallest of the ice giants:
Despite being smaller than Uranus, Neptune has a greater mass. Below its heavy atmosphere, Uranus is made of layers of hydrogen, helium, and methane gases. They enclose a layer of water, ammonia and methane ice. The inner core of the planet is made of rock.

The atmosphere of Neptune is made of hydrogen and helium, with some methane:
The methane absorbs red light, which makes the planet appear a lovely blue. High, thin clouds drift in the upper atmosphere.

Neptune has a very active climate:
Large storms whirl through its upper atmosphere, and high-speed winds track around the planet at up 1,340 kilometers per second. One of the largest storms ever seen was recorded in 1989. It was called the Great Dark Spot. It lasted about five years.

Neptune has a very thin collection of rings:
They’re probably made up of ice particles mixed with dust grains and possibly coated with a carbon-based substance.

Neptune has 14 moons:
The most interesting one is Triton, a frozen world that is spewing nitrogen ice and dust particles out from below its surface. It was likely captured by the gravitational pull of Neptune. It is probably the coldest world in the solar system.

Only one spacecraft has flown by Neptune:
In 1989, the Voyager 2 spacecraft swept past the planet. It returned the first close-up images of the Neptune system. The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has also studied this planet, as have a number of ground-based telescopes.


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