yes
White polar caps. Frozen carbon dioxide and water ice.
No. Uranus does not have a solid surface for the caps to be on. Earth and Mars have polar ice caps.
yes polar ice caps are freshwater
Yes, Neptune does have polar caps. Like Earth and other planets with atmospheres, Neptune's polar regions have icy caps composed of a mixture of water, ammonia, and methane ice. These polar caps experience seasonal variations as Neptune orbits the Sun.
The thickness of the polar ice caps can vary, with the average thickness being around 6,600 feet (2,000 meters) at the North Pole and around 9,800 feet (3,000 meters) at the South Pole. So if you were to measure the distance across the polar ice caps from one end to the other, it would be thousands of miles.
White polar caps. Frozen carbon dioxide and water ice.
No. Uranus does not have a solid surface for the caps to be on. Earth and Mars have polar ice caps.
yes polar ice caps are freshwater
no, they don't live in polar ice caps.
Yes, Neptune does have polar caps. Like Earth and other planets with atmospheres, Neptune's polar regions have icy caps composed of a mixture of water, ammonia, and methane ice. These polar caps experience seasonal variations as Neptune orbits the Sun.
Mars, Earth, and Pluto have polar ice caps. Mars' polar ice caps are primarily made of water and carbon dioxide ice, Earth's polar ice caps are primarily made of frozen water, and Pluto's polar ice caps are a mixture of methane and nitrogen ice.
Rain on the polar ice caps? Probably not; snow would be more common.
Global warming is melting the polar ice caps and they are slowly disappearing.
Generally by the polar regions
The thickness of the polar ice caps can vary, with the average thickness being around 6,600 feet (2,000 meters) at the North Pole and around 9,800 feet (3,000 meters) at the South Pole. So if you were to measure the distance across the polar ice caps from one end to the other, it would be thousands of miles.
No, nothing grows on ice caps.
recession of glaciers and ice caps