That's because they are beyond the asteroid belt which means they are already far from the sun, unlike the inner planets (also known as terrestial planets).
That information is available on the Nine Planets web site, http://nineplanets.org.
They are different because they have different atmospheres to the Sun. The main difference is that the Sun is a star which radiates energy and the planets are cold bodies which do not produce energy.
Because solar can absorb higher sun rays
Saturn's temperature is believed to be about -270 degrees Fahrenheit or -167 degrees Celsius, which is cold. It's so cold because its so far away from the sun. The hottest planets are the inner planets which consists of Mercury and Venus. Earth is in the Goldilocks zone witch is where it is not too hot and not too cold but the right temperature for life. Anything further away from the sun than the Earth is, is way below 0 degrees Celsius as mars is -250 degrees Celsius.
bolth planets are gas planets and close to the same distance from the sun
Simply because they are so far away from the Sun. The Sun's heat barely reaches them, thus they become cold, dark and lifeless.
That's because they are beyond the asteroid belt which means they are already far from the sun, unlike the inner planets (also known as terrestial planets).
Without the planets orbiting the sun all the planets would be cold and dark
How far is the earth to the sun?
We revolve around the Sun. There are only these known planets in our Solar System.
The first factor is distance from the sun. Most of the planets are too close or too far from the sun making them too hot or too cold. All the planets other than Earth have unbreathable atmospheres or, in the case of Mercury, no atmosphere. The four outer planets are gas planets with no solid surfaces.
How far away is Pluto from all the pther planets?
billions of kilometers from the sun
the planets away from the sun are called outer planets. They are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and if you consider it a planet Pluto.
1cm
Jupiter is.