Well, it used to be Pluto, but Pluto's not technically a planet anymore, so now there isn't one.
Neptune is the outer planet that is not a gas giant. It is classified as an ice giant due to its composition, which includes a significant amount of water, ammonia, and methane ices in addition to hydrogen and helium.
The outer planet that is not a gas giant is Neptune. Neptune is classified as an ice giant because its composition is primarily made up of water, ammonia, and methane, rather than mostly hydrogen and helium like the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn.
Saturn is not a terrestrial planet, so it is a gas planet.
it is classified as :-outer planetgas giant
Neptune is the smallest gas giant in our solar system.
Gas planet, giant planet or outer planet.
No planet - There are dwarf planets
It is not small and rocky, it is a gas giant!
Neptune is the outer planet that is not a gas giant. It is classified as an ice giant due to its composition, which includes a significant amount of water, ammonia, and methane ices in addition to hydrogen and helium.
The answer used to be Pluto, but that's not a planet now.
Gas giantA "gas giant" planet.
Well, it used to be Pluto, but Pluto's not technically a planet anymore, so now there isn't one.
Saturn has the lowest density of any planet, terrestial or gas giant.
Jupiter is one of the four gas giant planets, the outer planets.
Any planet past the asteroid belt, which is between Mars and Jupiter, is considered a gas giant, except for Pluto. Although Pluto is no longer classified as a planet, when it used to be classified as such, it was the only rocky planet past the asteroid belt.
All four outer planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are gas giants.
Earth is a rocky planet because the gas giants are in the outer planets and earth is in the inner planet.