It doesn't have any geysers.
Neptune is a gas giant, meaning it has no solid surface, so it is impossible for geysers to form.
You are probably mistaking Neptune and Triton (Neptune's largest moon). Voyager 2, during its flyby of Neptune, discovered geyser-like eruptions on the moon of Triton.
Volcanoes on Neptune do not blow out ice. Instead, Neptune's icy moon Triton has geysers that erupt nitrogen gas and icy particles from beneath its surface. These geysers create plumes that resemble volcanic eruptions on Earth but are driven by different processes.
The gas erupting out of the geysers on Triton, a moon of Neptune, is primarily nitrogen. Other gases such as methane and carbon dioxide have also been detected in these plumes.
Triton, the largest of Neptune's moons, has geysers of liquid nitrogen, creating a very thin atmosphere.
The planet's moon with cold geysers is Enceladus, a moon of Saturn. Cold geysers on Enceladus are primarily caused by tidal heating, where gravitational interactions with Saturn and other moons create friction and heat within the moon's core, allowing water and ice to spout out from its surface.
Iceland is known for its many geysers.
Volcanoes on Neptune do not blow out ice. Instead, Neptune's icy moon Triton has geysers that erupt nitrogen gas and icy particles from beneath its surface. These geysers create plumes that resemble volcanic eruptions on Earth but are driven by different processes.
Well......none does. However, Triton, one of the moons of Neptune, has such geysers.
That would be Saturn's eighth moon Enceladus.
The gas erupting out of the geysers on Triton, a moon of Neptune, is primarily nitrogen. Other gases such as methane and carbon dioxide have also been detected in these plumes.
Triton, the largest of Neptune's moons, has geysers of liquid nitrogen, creating a very thin atmosphere.
If I remember correctly, they shoot as high as 5 miles.
The planet's moon with cold geysers is Enceladus, a moon of Saturn. Cold geysers on Enceladus are primarily caused by tidal heating, where gravitational interactions with Saturn and other moons create friction and heat within the moon's core, allowing water and ice to spout out from its surface.
There are supposed to be 1000 geysers in the whole wide world.
Iceland is known for its many geysers.
There are fewer than 700 geysers in the world today and these geysers exist on every continent, apart from Antarctica. About half of the world's geysers can be found in Yellowstone Park.
There are no natural geysers in the Philippines. Geysers are typically found in areas with high geothermal activity, such as Iceland and Yellowstone National Park. The Philippines does have some volcanic activity and hot springs, but not geysers.
The world has about 1000 geysers. Roughly half of those, 500 geysers lay located in Yellowstone national park.