No, Venus is one of the four rocky inner plants and about the same size as the earth (~ 82% ) though the conditions on Venus are anything but earth like.
A gas giant as we cannot see the surface.
. . . All of them. The only planets with notable rings are Saturn (gas giant) and Uranus (ice giant).
The gas giant, Saturn, is much bigger than Venus, having 9.9 times the surface area of Venus. Venus-12,104 km Saturn-120,034 km
No, Pluto is not a gas giant. It is classified as a dwarf planet, as it does not have a clear orbit and has not cleared its neighborhood of other debris. Gas giants, like Jupiter and Saturn, are much larger and are primarily composed of gases with no solid surface.
Out of all the planets in our solar system, four are considered gas giants or Jovian planets. They are Saturn, Neptune, Uranus and Jupiter. The ones that are not gas giants are Mars, Mercury, Venus, and Earth.
A gas giant as we cannot see the surface.
Its one of the gas giants, though some may argue that it is an `ice giant`.
no
Venus is one of the four rocky or terrestrial planets - not a gas giant.
neither neptune and uranus is an ice giant
. . . All of them. The only planets with notable rings are Saturn (gas giant) and Uranus (ice giant).
Uranus is a gas giant, but the gas at the core is ice.
Technically none.Neptune is the bluest of the ice giants.
The gas giant, Saturn, is much bigger than Venus, having 9.9 times the surface area of Venus. Venus-12,104 km Saturn-120,034 km
venus is a planet that has a hard surface and is about the same size as earth but Jupiter is a gas giant with no hard surface to stand on
Saturn is the most logical answer. Uranus, however, is more like an ice giant rather than a gas giant.
No, Pluto is not a gas giant. It is classified as a dwarf planet, as it does not have a clear orbit and has not cleared its neighborhood of other debris. Gas giants, like Jupiter and Saturn, are much larger and are primarily composed of gases with no solid surface.