Yes, the planet Neptune is not great enough to really talk some real things in this world. All it dose is stare at the world go down in the trash. Then on hot days it watch's god put us in the ooven
Neptune has an odd orbital property. The orbit of Neptune crosses the orbital path of the dwarf planet Pluto, so there are times when Pluto is closer to the Sun than Neptune.
Sure! Three addition facts that have sums that are odd numbers are: 1+1=2 (even), 2+1=3 (odd), 3+3=6 (even).
It is Neptune. This is because Mercury, Mars and Venus are all "rocky" planets, where as Neptune is a Jovian planet, meaning it is a giant gas planet.
Neptune is one of the gas giants that orbit in the outer solar system. It is spherical, like the other planets. Gravity has pulled together all the material that composes this odd planet, and it is gravity that determines its shape. One determinate of whether or not a body is a planet is whether or not gravity has rounded its structure.
it is a odd number
The GCF of any set of odd numbers is odd because odd numbers don't have any even factors.
November is the 11th month.
Because of our odd planet rotation, it looks like our planet is wobbling
Any set of odd numbers, yes.
It is the comet which is not a planet or Earth - it is inhabited, the others are not.
Yes, it has to be odd.
Voyager 2.There haven't been any specific space probes sent to Neptune for mapping or exploration, like Cassini for Saturn and Galileo for Jupiter. However, the Voyager 2 space probe passed by Neptune in 1989 on its way out of the solar system and sent back pictures and information showing it to be an odd planet indeed.Voyager 1 and 2 were originally programmed to visit Saturn and Jupiter, but Voyager 2's trajectory was altered to visit Neptune and Uranus also, and remains the only spacecraft to have visited either planet. (Voyager 1 was flown past Saturn's moon Titan instead.)The Voyager Interstellar Mission, controlled by the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, CA, is still in contact with the Voyager spacecraft via the Deep Space Network, a huge array of globally interlinked radio telescopes that use their combined capability to communicate with them.