The Outer Planets are called Jovian Planets!
Well technically there aren't any because Pluto is not a planet but Pluto does cross orbital paths with Neptune.
Yes. Sometimes Neptune is father away from the sun than Pluto. Pluto's orbit crosses Neptune's. None of the other seven planets ever get farther away from the sun that Pluto.
Pluto does not interact with any planets.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Pluto
It seems there is no general consensus about the exact definition of "Jovian planets." Depending on the definition used, Neptune is, or is not, a "Jovian planet"; as explained on Wikipedia: "Giant planets are also sometimes called jovian planets, after Jupiter. They are also sometimes known as gas giants. However, many astronomers apply the latter term only to Jupiter and Saturn, classifying Uranus and Neptune, which have different compositions, as ice giants. ..."
Dwarf planets
They are sometimes called "major planets" to distinguish them from the "minor planets" (the asteroids) and "dwarf planets" like Pluto.
no, only gas planets have rings except Pluto
Yes, Pluto was a moon to one of the planets called Neptune.
All of the planets in the Solar System have been visited by machines except for the planet Pluto. There was a machine that was launched in 2004 for a flyby to Pluto in 2014.
Asteroids, some comets, and dwarf planets are classified as minor planets. Stars and galaxies are much larger than planets There are dwarf planets and these are Ceres Pluto and Eris.
Well technically there aren't any because Pluto is not a planet but Pluto does cross orbital paths with Neptune.
dwarf planets, an example would be Pluto.
I do no know what the inner planets share but the outer planets except Pluto are gas giants. inner our "rocky" ^_^
Each of these is a terrestrial bodies, they have a clearly defined surface, unlike the gas giant planets. All are planets except for Pluto, which has now been reclassified as a dwarf planet.
Yes. Sometimes Neptune is father away from the sun than Pluto. Pluto's orbit crosses Neptune's. None of the other seven planets ever get farther away from the sun that Pluto.
No, because Pluto has been reclassified as a dwarf planet. Dwarf planets are not planets, despite the confusing term. Before Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet, sometimes the Pluto-Charon system was thought of as a double planet, so you can sometimes find that in outdated but authoritative-seeming references.