Neptune is the most beautiful planet the author has seen in a poster. It has a surface temperature of -196°C and 14 moons. Its surface is made of rock, ice and gases and has no life due to extremely cold temperatures and lack of sunlight.
Neptune is the 8th planet from the Sun located 2.8 billion miles away. It has a bluish-purple color and an atmosphere composed of hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane gases. The temperature is extremely cold at -196°C so the water is frozen and there is no life possible due to the deadly gases and lack of water and food.
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun at a distance of over 4.5 billion km. It has a very cold temperature of around -196C, causing its water to be frozen. Neptune has 13 known moons and an atmosphere composed of hydrogen, helium, and methane gases that form clouds.
Neptune was discovered in 1846 and named after the Roman god of the sea. It is the eighth planet from the Sun, orbiting at a distance of 30.1 AU. Neptune has a diameter of 49,500 km, a rotation period of 16 hours, and is composed primarily of ice and rock. The planet has a complex atmospheric composition including hydrogen, helium, and methane, and experiences strong winds up to 2,100 km/hr. Neptune has 13 known moons including its largest, Triton, which spews nitrogen ice from below its surface. Voyager 2 was the first and only spacecraft to visit Neptune, coming within 4,400 km of its atmosphere in 1989.
Neptune is the 8th and farthest planet from the Sun. It is smaller than Uranus but more massive. Neptune was discovered in 1846 based on calculations by Urbain Le Verrier and independent predictions by John Couch Adams. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Neptune, discovering its rings and six of its 14 known moons during a 1989 flyby.
This document provides information about the planets in our solar system through Mercury. It includes brief descriptions of key facts about each planet, such as their composition, distance from the sun, and known moons. Users can click on planets for additional videos and details. Resources from NASA and other astronomy sites are also provided at the end.
The document discusses the planet Neptune, including that it was discovered in 1846, has an average temperature of -360 degrees Fahrenheit, and is composed primarily of hydrogen, helium, and methane. It notes facts like Neptune's winds reaching speeds of 1,490 miles per hour and its orbital period being equivalent to 165 Earth years. The document also explains that while Neptune contains water, its atmosphere is not suitable for human life due to the lack of oxygen.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun, located 2.77 billion miles away. It has a diameter of 30,760 miles and is bluish-green in color with a temperature of -346 degrees Fahrenheit. Neptune has 13 moons and an atmosphere composed primarily of methane gas, which makes it too cold and toxic to support life.
The document provides information about various celestial bodies in our solar system, including the sun, planets, dwarf planets, comets, and more. It describes key facts about each, such as their composition, distance from the sun, presence of moons or rings, temperature conditions, and dangers to watch out for during a hypothetical space travel tour. The writing is aimed at educating and entertaining children about our solar system in simple terms.
Neptune is the 8th planet from the Sun located 2.8 billion miles away. It has a bluish-purple color and an atmosphere composed of hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane gases. The temperature is extremely cold at -196°C so the water is frozen and there is no life possible due to the deadly gases and lack of water and food.
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun at a distance of over 4.5 billion km. It has a very cold temperature of around -196C, causing its water to be frozen. Neptune has 13 known moons and an atmosphere composed of hydrogen, helium, and methane gases that form clouds.
Neptune was discovered in 1846 and named after the Roman god of the sea. It is the eighth planet from the Sun, orbiting at a distance of 30.1 AU. Neptune has a diameter of 49,500 km, a rotation period of 16 hours, and is composed primarily of ice and rock. The planet has a complex atmospheric composition including hydrogen, helium, and methane, and experiences strong winds up to 2,100 km/hr. Neptune has 13 known moons including its largest, Triton, which spews nitrogen ice from below its surface. Voyager 2 was the first and only spacecraft to visit Neptune, coming within 4,400 km of its atmosphere in 1989.
Neptune is the 8th and farthest planet from the Sun. It is smaller than Uranus but more massive. Neptune was discovered in 1846 based on calculations by Urbain Le Verrier and independent predictions by John Couch Adams. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Neptune, discovering its rings and six of its 14 known moons during a 1989 flyby.
This document provides information about the planets in our solar system through Mercury. It includes brief descriptions of key facts about each planet, such as their composition, distance from the sun, and known moons. Users can click on planets for additional videos and details. Resources from NASA and other astronomy sites are also provided at the end.
The document discusses the planet Neptune, including that it was discovered in 1846, has an average temperature of -360 degrees Fahrenheit, and is composed primarily of hydrogen, helium, and methane. It notes facts like Neptune's winds reaching speeds of 1,490 miles per hour and its orbital period being equivalent to 165 Earth years. The document also explains that while Neptune contains water, its atmosphere is not suitable for human life due to the lack of oxygen.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun, located 2.77 billion miles away. It has a diameter of 30,760 miles and is bluish-green in color with a temperature of -346 degrees Fahrenheit. Neptune has 13 moons and an atmosphere composed primarily of methane gas, which makes it too cold and toxic to support life.
The document provides information about various celestial bodies in our solar system, including the sun, planets, dwarf planets, comets, and more. It describes key facts about each, such as their composition, distance from the sun, presence of moons or rings, temperature conditions, and dangers to watch out for during a hypothetical space travel tour. The writing is aimed at educating and entertaining children about our solar system in simple terms.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and is an inner planet made of iron silicate and nickel. It has an atmosphere composed of carbon dioxide and nitrogen and an average temperature of 467°C. Venus has no moons and orbits the Sun every 2,264 days. Neptune is the eighth planet located in the outer solar system. It is made of rocky core, water, and liquid hydrogen, and has an atmosphere of hydrogen, helium, and methane. Neptune has 13 moons and orbits the Sun once every 1,648 years.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun. It is named after the Roman god of the sea. Neptune is 17 times the mass of Earth and slightly more massive than Uranus. Neptune has the strongest winds of any planet, with speeds over 1400 km/h. Neptune has a thin atmosphere composed mostly of hydrogen and helium with traces of hydrocarbons and nitrogen. Neptune has a system of rings and 13 known moons, the largest being Triton. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Neptune, providing the first close-up images of the planet, its rings, and moons.
Neptune is the third largest planet in our solar system and the furthest known planet from the Sun. It is made primarily of ice and methane gas, and has a blue appearance due to methane in its atmosphere. Neptune has 14 moons, the largest being Triton, and rings surrounding it. At -373 degrees Fahrenheit, Neptune is the coldest planet in our solar system and does not support life.
The outer solar system & the oort could, NAte and Alexwhitmers
1) Jupiter acts as a shield for Earth, drawing comets towards the sun. One of its moons, Europa, may have an underground ocean suitable to support life.
2) Saturn is the second largest planet by mass. It has a diameter of over 120,000 km and orbits the sun from about 1.4 billion km away. Christian Huygens discovered Saturn's rings in 1659.
3) Uranus and Neptune have atmospheres composed of hydrogen, helium, and icy materials like water and methane. Neptune is the farthest planet from the sun and has extreme winds and weather.
This document provides information about the planets in our solar system and the sun. It describes the 8 major planets - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune - listing their key characteristics such as size, composition, temperature, and features. It also briefly discusses Pluto and identifies it as a dwarf planet. The planets range from small, rocky Mercury and Mars to the large gas giants Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Earth is noted as the planet where all life lives, with land, seas and an atmosphere containing nitrogen and oxygen.
Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system with surface temperatures reaching over 900 degrees Fahrenheit due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere and proximity to the sun. It has no water and cannot sustain life due to the extreme heat and presence of poisonous gases like carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Key facts noted are that Venus is the closest planet to the sun and has the hottest surface of any planet in the universe despite being only the sixth largest planet.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun and is named after the Roman god of the sea. It is almost 4 times the diameter of Earth and over 30 times farther from the sun. Neptune has very strong winds up to 1,240 mph, making it the stormiest planet, and a system of thin, incomplete rings. It has 13 known moons with Triton being the largest.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and the hottest planet in the solar system with an average surface temperature of 467°C. Galileo first observed Venus in the 17th century and the Russian scientist Mikhail Lomonosov discovered its dense, cloudy atmosphere in 1761. To survive on Venus, one would need a suit that cools the body, a protective shell, a filter to prevent toxic gases from being inhaled, and a way to increase gravitational pull to account for Venus' 91% of Earth's gravity. Food and water could not be in liquid form due to the extreme heat.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and the hottest planet in the solar system with an average surface temperature of 467°C. Galileo first observed Venus in the 17th century and the Russian scientist Mikhail Lomonosov discovered its dense, toxic atmosphere in 1761. To survive on Venus, specialized equipment would be needed to withstand the extreme heat such as a cooling suit, protective shell, air filtration system, and housing made of liquid nitrogen. The planet has evidence of geological features like volcanoes and mountains but its surface appears to consist of a single crustal plate unlike Earth which has plate tectonics.
Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun in our solar system. It is classified as an ice giant along with Uranus. Neptune was discovered in 1846 and is named after the Roman god of the sea. With winds up to 2,100 km/hr, Neptune has the fastest winds in the solar system. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Neptune, sending back data and images of the planet and its moons during its flyby in 1989.
Uranus and Neptune are cold, gaseous planets discovered in the last 350 years using telescopes and mathematics. They have similar physical properties but Neptune shows more surface features. Uranus's unique tilted axis causes extreme seasons, while Neptune has unexplained internal heat. Both planets have moon systems, with Triton in a rare retrograde orbit around Neptune. Faint rings have also been detected circling Uranus and Neptune.
The document provides information about visiting the planet Uranus. Some key points include:
- Travel to Uranus would be via Canadian HighFlyers spacecraft and take 2.57 billion kilometers.
- Temperatures on Uranus are extremely cold or hot depending on the side, with no atmosphere to regulate temperatures.
- Activities on Uranus include visiting its moons like Miranda, skating on its dark rings, and windsurfing in 700 mph winds.
Neptune is the eighth and most distant planet from the Sun. It is a gas giant that may have originally formed closer to the Sun before migrating outward. Key facts about Neptune include that it has 14 moons, a thin ring system, and an atmosphere composed primarily of hydrogen and helium with some methane.
The document provides information about the planets in our solar system. It discusses the key facts about Mercury, such as it being the closest planet to the sun and having no atmosphere. Venus is described as being similar in size to Earth but much hotter due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere. The document expresses a personal preference for Earth and also provides details about the orbits and atmospheres of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
There are 8 planets in our solar system. Mercury is the closest planet to the sun, with an orbit of 88 days. It is the smallest and innermost planet. Earth is the only planet known to have living organisms and is 71% covered in water. It has one natural satellite, the Moon. Mars is also known as the red planet and has a very thin atmosphere composed mostly of carbon dioxide. It can be seen in the night sky with the unaided eye. Jupiter is about 90% hydrogen and 10% helium, with a diameter of 142,750km, making it the largest planet in the solar system. Saturn is surrounded by rings composed likely of ice and is over 1426 million km from the sun,
The solar system formed 4.6 billion years ago from a giant cloud and contains the Sun and 9 planets. The Sun is a hot ball of gas that produces energy through nuclear fusion. The planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and the dwarf planet Pluto. The inner planets are small and rocky, while the outer planets are large gas giants. The planets have diverse characteristics and conditions depending on their distance from the Sun.
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun in our solar system, taking over 165 Earth years to complete its orbit. It is a cold, windy gas giant composed of water, ammonia and methane, with weather including 16-hour days. Though smaller than other gas giants like Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus, Neptune remains one of the coldest places in the solar system, with its moon Triton holding the record as one of the coldest objects.
Neptune is named after the Roman god of water. It is located next to Uranus and Pluto, over 4.5 billion kilometers from the sun. Neptune has a circumference of 55,500 miles and has very cold weather due to its distance from the sun. No visitors have been to Neptune because it is too cold and current astronaut suits are not equipped for its conditions. Neptune is colder than Earth and has rings unlike Earth. It also has a great dark spot like Jupiter and over ten moons, one of which is being pulled into the planet.
Eloy´s presentation of the planets 18 3-2011profesorsmm
1) The document provides information about the eight planets in our solar system - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
2) It describes key facts about each planet such as their distance from the sun, diameter, composition, and other notable characteristics.
3) The planets are ordered from the closest to the sun, Mercury, to the farthest planet Neptune, with details provided about each planet's formation, composition, climate, and other distinguishing features.
Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system. It is about 888 million miles from the sun, with a surface temperature of around 290 F. Saturn has an atmosphere composed of ammonia ice, water ice clouds and hydrogen gas. Interesting features include huge iconic rings and storms of various colors. While Saturn contains water ice clouds, it cannot sustain life due to being made of gases, extremely cold temperatures, lack of liquids on its surface, and the long travel time from Earth.
Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system, known for its beautiful rings. It is about 888 million miles from the sun, with surface temperatures of around -290°C. Saturn is composed primarily of hydrogen and helium gases, though it has an atmosphere consisting of water, ammonia, and methane clouds. Life cannot be sustained on Saturn due to its gaseous composition and extremely cold temperatures without liquid water.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and is an inner planet made of iron silicate and nickel. It has an atmosphere composed of carbon dioxide and nitrogen and an average temperature of 467°C. Venus has no moons and orbits the Sun every 2,264 days. Neptune is the eighth planet located in the outer solar system. It is made of rocky core, water, and liquid hydrogen, and has an atmosphere of hydrogen, helium, and methane. Neptune has 13 moons and orbits the Sun once every 1,648 years.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun. It is named after the Roman god of the sea. Neptune is 17 times the mass of Earth and slightly more massive than Uranus. Neptune has the strongest winds of any planet, with speeds over 1400 km/h. Neptune has a thin atmosphere composed mostly of hydrogen and helium with traces of hydrocarbons and nitrogen. Neptune has a system of rings and 13 known moons, the largest being Triton. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Neptune, providing the first close-up images of the planet, its rings, and moons.
Neptune is the third largest planet in our solar system and the furthest known planet from the Sun. It is made primarily of ice and methane gas, and has a blue appearance due to methane in its atmosphere. Neptune has 14 moons, the largest being Triton, and rings surrounding it. At -373 degrees Fahrenheit, Neptune is the coldest planet in our solar system and does not support life.
The outer solar system & the oort could, NAte and Alexwhitmers
1) Jupiter acts as a shield for Earth, drawing comets towards the sun. One of its moons, Europa, may have an underground ocean suitable to support life.
2) Saturn is the second largest planet by mass. It has a diameter of over 120,000 km and orbits the sun from about 1.4 billion km away. Christian Huygens discovered Saturn's rings in 1659.
3) Uranus and Neptune have atmospheres composed of hydrogen, helium, and icy materials like water and methane. Neptune is the farthest planet from the sun and has extreme winds and weather.
This document provides information about the planets in our solar system and the sun. It describes the 8 major planets - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune - listing their key characteristics such as size, composition, temperature, and features. It also briefly discusses Pluto and identifies it as a dwarf planet. The planets range from small, rocky Mercury and Mars to the large gas giants Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Earth is noted as the planet where all life lives, with land, seas and an atmosphere containing nitrogen and oxygen.
Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system with surface temperatures reaching over 900 degrees Fahrenheit due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere and proximity to the sun. It has no water and cannot sustain life due to the extreme heat and presence of poisonous gases like carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Key facts noted are that Venus is the closest planet to the sun and has the hottest surface of any planet in the universe despite being only the sixth largest planet.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun and is named after the Roman god of the sea. It is almost 4 times the diameter of Earth and over 30 times farther from the sun. Neptune has very strong winds up to 1,240 mph, making it the stormiest planet, and a system of thin, incomplete rings. It has 13 known moons with Triton being the largest.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and the hottest planet in the solar system with an average surface temperature of 467°C. Galileo first observed Venus in the 17th century and the Russian scientist Mikhail Lomonosov discovered its dense, cloudy atmosphere in 1761. To survive on Venus, one would need a suit that cools the body, a protective shell, a filter to prevent toxic gases from being inhaled, and a way to increase gravitational pull to account for Venus' 91% of Earth's gravity. Food and water could not be in liquid form due to the extreme heat.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and the hottest planet in the solar system with an average surface temperature of 467°C. Galileo first observed Venus in the 17th century and the Russian scientist Mikhail Lomonosov discovered its dense, toxic atmosphere in 1761. To survive on Venus, specialized equipment would be needed to withstand the extreme heat such as a cooling suit, protective shell, air filtration system, and housing made of liquid nitrogen. The planet has evidence of geological features like volcanoes and mountains but its surface appears to consist of a single crustal plate unlike Earth which has plate tectonics.
Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun in our solar system. It is classified as an ice giant along with Uranus. Neptune was discovered in 1846 and is named after the Roman god of the sea. With winds up to 2,100 km/hr, Neptune has the fastest winds in the solar system. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Neptune, sending back data and images of the planet and its moons during its flyby in 1989.
Uranus and Neptune are cold, gaseous planets discovered in the last 350 years using telescopes and mathematics. They have similar physical properties but Neptune shows more surface features. Uranus's unique tilted axis causes extreme seasons, while Neptune has unexplained internal heat. Both planets have moon systems, with Triton in a rare retrograde orbit around Neptune. Faint rings have also been detected circling Uranus and Neptune.
The document provides information about visiting the planet Uranus. Some key points include:
- Travel to Uranus would be via Canadian HighFlyers spacecraft and take 2.57 billion kilometers.
- Temperatures on Uranus are extremely cold or hot depending on the side, with no atmosphere to regulate temperatures.
- Activities on Uranus include visiting its moons like Miranda, skating on its dark rings, and windsurfing in 700 mph winds.
Neptune is the eighth and most distant planet from the Sun. It is a gas giant that may have originally formed closer to the Sun before migrating outward. Key facts about Neptune include that it has 14 moons, a thin ring system, and an atmosphere composed primarily of hydrogen and helium with some methane.
The document provides information about the planets in our solar system. It discusses the key facts about Mercury, such as it being the closest planet to the sun and having no atmosphere. Venus is described as being similar in size to Earth but much hotter due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere. The document expresses a personal preference for Earth and also provides details about the orbits and atmospheres of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
There are 8 planets in our solar system. Mercury is the closest planet to the sun, with an orbit of 88 days. It is the smallest and innermost planet. Earth is the only planet known to have living organisms and is 71% covered in water. It has one natural satellite, the Moon. Mars is also known as the red planet and has a very thin atmosphere composed mostly of carbon dioxide. It can be seen in the night sky with the unaided eye. Jupiter is about 90% hydrogen and 10% helium, with a diameter of 142,750km, making it the largest planet in the solar system. Saturn is surrounded by rings composed likely of ice and is over 1426 million km from the sun,
The solar system formed 4.6 billion years ago from a giant cloud and contains the Sun and 9 planets. The Sun is a hot ball of gas that produces energy through nuclear fusion. The planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and the dwarf planet Pluto. The inner planets are small and rocky, while the outer planets are large gas giants. The planets have diverse characteristics and conditions depending on their distance from the Sun.
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun in our solar system, taking over 165 Earth years to complete its orbit. It is a cold, windy gas giant composed of water, ammonia and methane, with weather including 16-hour days. Though smaller than other gas giants like Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus, Neptune remains one of the coldest places in the solar system, with its moon Triton holding the record as one of the coldest objects.
Neptune is named after the Roman god of water. It is located next to Uranus and Pluto, over 4.5 billion kilometers from the sun. Neptune has a circumference of 55,500 miles and has very cold weather due to its distance from the sun. No visitors have been to Neptune because it is too cold and current astronaut suits are not equipped for its conditions. Neptune is colder than Earth and has rings unlike Earth. It also has a great dark spot like Jupiter and over ten moons, one of which is being pulled into the planet.
Eloy´s presentation of the planets 18 3-2011profesorsmm
1) The document provides information about the eight planets in our solar system - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
2) It describes key facts about each planet such as their distance from the sun, diameter, composition, and other notable characteristics.
3) The planets are ordered from the closest to the sun, Mercury, to the farthest planet Neptune, with details provided about each planet's formation, composition, climate, and other distinguishing features.
Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system. It is about 888 million miles from the sun, with a surface temperature of around 290 F. Saturn has an atmosphere composed of ammonia ice, water ice clouds and hydrogen gas. Interesting features include huge iconic rings and storms of various colors. While Saturn contains water ice clouds, it cannot sustain life due to being made of gases, extremely cold temperatures, lack of liquids on its surface, and the long travel time from Earth.
Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system, known for its beautiful rings. It is about 888 million miles from the sun, with surface temperatures of around -290°C. Saturn is composed primarily of hydrogen and helium gases, though it has an atmosphere consisting of water, ammonia, and methane clouds. Life cannot be sustained on Saturn due to its gaseous composition and extremely cold temperatures without liquid water.
Nienke Kernkamp's document introduces Mars and discusses several facts about the planet. It notes that Mars may have once or currently support life. The document states that Mars is 142 million miles from the sun, with surface temperatures ranging from -184°F to 80°F. While there is currently only frozen water on Mars, some scientists believe there may still be liquid water underground. The largest mountain in the solar system, Olympus Mons, is located on Mars. The document suggests that with melting ice and altering the atmosphere, humans may be able to live on Mars in the future.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and has the hottest surface temperature in the solar system at around 500°C. It has a thick, toxic atmosphere composed primarily of carbon dioxide with sulfuric acid clouds. The surface is solid rock, as the intense heat evaporates any water, and the gravity is too strong to support life. While once possibly similar to Earth, Venus has reversed its rotation direction and is slowly shrinking as it continues to melt under the sun's heat.
Mars may have once supported life and could potentially support human life in the future. It is approximately 227 million kilometers from the Sun, giving it a surface temperature range of -18°F to +80°F. Mars has an atmosphere composed of carbon dioxide, argon, and other gases. Water is believed to have once flowed on the Martian surface, but evaporated due to the planet's high temperatures. One of Mars' moons is predicted to crash into Mars in the future.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System, with over twice the mass of all other planets combined. It is composed primarily of hydrogen and helium, with bands of clouds swirling in its atmosphere. Below the clouds is a vast ocean of liquid hydrogen, with a dense core many times hotter than the sun's surface. Jupiter has over 60 moons, with the four largest known as the Galilean satellites. Its most iconic feature is the Great Red Spot, a massive storm twice the size of Earth.
Uranus is the third largest gas giant in the solar system. It is extremely cold at -370 degrees Fahrenheit due to its distance from the sun of over 2.8 billion kilometers. While Uranus contains water, it is entirely frozen solid. The atmosphere is composed primarily of hydrogen and methane gases, and it may occasionally rain diamonds deep within the planet due to the pressure. Life would be impossible on Uranus due to the frigid temperatures, lack of solid surface, and absence of plants.
Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun, around 142 million miles away with surface temperatures ranging from about 20°C during the day to -150°C at night. It has an atmosphere composed primarily of carbon dioxide and features craters, volcanoes and mountains, including Olympus Mons which is the largest mountain in the solar system. While water exists on Mars in frozen form, current conditions are too cold and atmospheric composition unsuitable to support life, though some scientists speculate that terraforming efforts could make Mars habitable to life in over 100,000 years.
Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system with surface temperatures reaching 500°C. It is the second closest planet to the Sun which contributes to its extreme heat. The dense carbon dioxide atmosphere traps heat from the Sun and any water would vaporize within minutes. The surface is made up of hot lava under a blanket of toxic clouds, making Venus uninhabitable for human life.
Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun and named after the Roman god of war. It has a cold temperature ranging from -184°F to 80°F due to its distance of 142 million miles from the Sun. While scientists initially thought there was water on Mars, it is now known to exist mostly in the form of ice. The surface is composed of iron oxide and basalt, and the atmosphere contains nitrogen, oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide and other poisonous gases. With melting of ice to create water and machines to remove toxic gases, it may be possible for life to exist on Mars.
Mars is the planet after Earth from the Sun, named after the Roman god of war. It is 142 million miles from the Sun, with surface temperatures ranging from -184 to 80 degrees Fahrenheit. While there is frozen water and ice on the surface, scientists have discovered evidence that water once flowed in the valleys. The thin atmosphere is made up of nitrogen, oxygen, argon and carbon dioxide, and scientists want to try building it up over years. Notable features include Olympus Mons, the tallest solar system mountain at over 15 miles high, and two moons named Phobos and Deimos.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and has the hottest surface temperature in the solar system at 500 degrees Celsius due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere that traps heat. While Venus is similar in size to Earth, it cannot sustain life due to extreme temperatures, atmospheric pressure, and lack of water on its primarily rocky surface dominated by volcanoes larger than Mount Everest. Venus's day lasts over eight months and its dense atmosphere is made up mostly of carbon dioxide and other deadly gases that could crush humans.
2. Introducing Neptune I chose Neptune because it is the most beautiful planet I have ever seen on a poster. Neptune looks like a huge pearl floating In space.
3. The Temperature on Neptune Neptune’s surface temperature is – 196°c but on the tips of Neptune`s clouds it is way colder because there the temperature is -210°c.
4. Distance from the sun From Neptune the sun looks like no more than a tiny speck because Neptune is 4,504,000,000 kilometers away from the sun!
5. Moons Although Earth has only one moon Neptune has 14of them. There sure is a lot of moon light on Neptune!
6. Neptune`s surface and weather Neptune`s surface is made out of rock, ice and gases. Bad luck if you are thirsty because you will find nothing except ice. Neptune’s weather is not really what you call warm, you see Neptune is the eighth planet in the solar system and its hard to get a tan.
7. No life on Neptune!! There is no way that Neptune can sustain life because it is -196°c on Neptune, Neptune’s water is frozen so we can not drink it and there is no sunlight on Neptune so we can not grow plants.