The Jovian Planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.... Jovian means Made of Gas.
Jovian Planets do not have a solid surface to stand on.
Inner planets are terrestrial planets outer are jovian planets
Jovian planets are: -gaseous -farthest planets from the sun -largest planets
The Jovian planets are gas giants and have no surface.
The four Jovian planets
No. The Jovian planets are much more massive than the terrestrial planets.
Just beyond the Jovian planets is the Kuiper Belt.
The Jovian planets have much higher escape velocities.
Uranus is the planet out of the Jovian planets that does not have rings.
No, there is more hydrogen on the Jovian planets then the terrestrial ones.
Pluto is the only "planet" that isn't a planet. Well I think that the IAU still have not answered the question WHAT MAKES A PLANET A PLANET? Is it a certain size or something? Comment : The IAU have defined a planet. The definition is mainly about size, but it's not simple: 1) The object must be big enough for gravity to have formed it into a (roughly) spherical shape. 2) The object must be by far the largest object in the neighbourhood of its orbit. Pluto qualifies on 1) but fails on 2). Also, Venus and Mercury are sometimes called "morning stars" or "evening stars", but they are planets.
Jupiter is a Jovian Plant. The adjective Jovian has come to mean anything associated with Jupiter; and by extension, a Jupiter-like planet. The Jovian planets are the gas giants: Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune. Many, if not most, of the exoplanets discovered to date appear to be Jovian. By contrast, terrestrial, aka telluric, aka rocky planets differ significantly from the gas giant/Jovian planets in that they are composed primarily of metals and silicate rocks (hence "rocky" planets) like Earth, aka Terra (from which we get the word terrestrial) and are "Earth-like" as opposed to "jupiter-like"/Jovian. The terrestrial planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. All the dwarf planets are also more terrestrial than jovian.