Neptune doesn't really have a solid surface like Earth does. It's a large gas planet with an exposed molten core. There isn't a way to stand on it like standing on Earth, instead you'd sink into the planet and be incinerated by the molten core.
If you could, though, you'd find that Neptune's gravity is about 1.14 g or 1.14 times earth gravity. If a person who weighted 137 pounds on Earth weighed in on Neptune, the scale would tip at about 156.2 pounds.
Neptune isn't dense enought (not solid enought ground) to stand on so it couldn't so it just flew by and there were 2 voyagers that went out when the planets were aligned in a perfect way to easily get from on to another
Venus.
There is no exact answer to this. If you could somehow get a large enough body of water to test it in, many of the gases in Neptune's atmosphere (e.g. ammonia) would rapidly dissolve in the water. Also Neptune is likely to have a dense stony or metallic core under its thick atmosphere, so different parts of Neptune might do different things. However if Neptune had a homogeneous, insoluble in water, not chemically reactive composition, a sample of it would have a density less than the density of water an so would float, but Neptune does not have such a composition.
Neptune is very very cold a coat would not protect you enough.
No. Neptune is cold enough that even a coat would not protect you.
Neptune isn't dense enought (not solid enought ground) to stand on so it couldn't so it just flew by and there were 2 voyagers that went out when the planets were aligned in a perfect way to easily get from on to another
Neptune is a gas planet; there is no surface to stand on.
No because it has no surface to stand on because it is a gas planet not a solid planet. If it was a solid and hard planet then yeah but it isn't
The Jovian planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus. Of these planets, Neptune is the most dense, at 1.638 grams per cubic centimeter.
Venus.
Thick air. Planets like Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus have a very dense atmosphere.
An object that orbits Neptune would be called a MOON of Neptune, if it is large enough.
We're not certain. It may be that since Neptune is the farthest gas giant from the Sun, and cold gasses become more dense.
no because planet neptune does not have enough atmosphere for human to breath in
# == == none because the clouds are so dense with toxic gases
There is no exact answer to this. If you could somehow get a large enough body of water to test it in, many of the gases in Neptune's atmosphere (e.g. ammonia) would rapidly dissolve in the water. Also Neptune is likely to have a dense stony or metallic core under its thick atmosphere, so different parts of Neptune might do different things. However if Neptune had a homogeneous, insoluble in water, not chemically reactive composition, a sample of it would have a density less than the density of water an so would float, but Neptune does not have such a composition.
Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus.