The god of oceans and seas.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun in the Solar System, and was named for the Roman god of the sea (equivalent to the Greek Poseidon). The name was originally proposed by Urbain Le Verrier, a French mathematician who specialized in celestial mechanics who was one of those who first identified Neptune as a planet.
The Planet Neptune was re-named by the Romans for the Roman Sea God, Neptune, in the tradition of the Greeks.
No. Planet Neptune is named after a God, not a Goddess. Neptune gets its name from the Roman God of the Deep Sea, Neptune.
The planet Neptune was named for the Roman god Neptune.
Yes, neptunium is named after the planet Neptune.
The planet Neptune is named after the Roman god Neptune, the god of the sea. Neptune is the Roman equivalent of the Greek god Poseidon.
The planet Neptune is named after a Roman god named Neptune... The chemical element neptunium is in the periodic table after uranium; also the planet Neptune is after Uranus in the Solar system - it is an analogy.
The planet Neptune was named for the Roman god of water and the seas.In the original Greek language, from whence this Roman god was taken, his name was Poisedon.
Neptune is a planet that looks like it is covered with water. They named it Neptune after the ancient god of water Neptune.
Neptune was the Roman version of Poseidon so planet Neptune is named after it.
Astronomers named Neptune after the Roman God of the deep sea to uphold the tradition of naming planets after mythical figures. The name wasn't only given because the colour of the planet resembles the ocean, the name also fits the planet well because of its position in "deep" space (deep sea - deep space). The symbol for planet Neptune is the Trident (the weapon favoured by the God Neptune). Neptune's largest moon was also named after the Greek God of the sea's son, Triton.
Neptune