Uranus' ocean is hot due to the atmosphere in the planet. The surface is said to be made of an ocean that is very hot at extremely high temperatures.
I don't now
It depends on how far away the planet is from a star. If it's close, it's hot. Also, if the planet rotates on its axis there would be a big day-night temperature difference.
planet venus
Mostly for the same reason you stay close to the surface of the planet - gravity!
venus
The outside layers of the atmosphere are very cold, as they get little heat from the Sun. The surface is unreachable beneath the hot, extremely dense lower atmosphere.
Uranus' ocean is hot due to the atmosphere in the planet. The surface is said to be made of an ocean that is very hot at extremely high temperatures.
No, it's a planet.
Neptune is an "Ice Giant" planet. Neptune's atmosphere is composed primarily of hydrogen and helium. We can not see the surface but we believe the surface is primarily composed of ices and rock and the planet has a hot core.
Hard to say, as the distance from the star will also factor in, but in general, thin atmosphere would mean no insulation, it would be cold. Mars is a classic example of a planet having a thin atmosphere. It is extremely cold on Mars and has a small amount of carbon dioxide in it's atmosphere but is not in high enough concentration to warm the planet. Mercury has no atmosphere and it is hot and cold depending on which part of the planet is facing the Sun. Venus has a very dense amosphere and it is very hot, no matter which surface is facing the Sun.
I don't now
As the planet Jupiter has no surface, the temperature of the "surface" cannot be measured.
Probably. Any planet can have a wet surface if it's not hot.
What is Gravity?
there are trace ice crystals in the atmosphere swirling around faster then an F5 tornado but uranus has no solid surface and its core would be to hot so the question is yes it does have ice in atmosphere but not on the surface as it has none its a gas giant
Venus!