The pale blue planet you are referring to is Neptune. It is the outermost of the gas giants in our solar system and is known for its striking blue color, which is primarily due to the presence of methane in its atmosphere. Neptune is characterized by strong winds and storms, including the Great Dark Spot, a massive storm system similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot. It has a total of 14 known moons, with Triton being the largest.
Mercury is a rock planet; it is solid. Any planet to the left of the asteroid belt (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) are rock planets, or terrestrial planets, while any planet to the right of the asteroid belt are gaseous (Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus).
They are made mostly of hydrogen and helium.
It does have a dense atmosphere.
Saturn is a gassy planet, so if u were to try to land on it, u would fall right through it. but saturns rings are make up of chunks of rock and ice -Harmony
The gassy planets are much more massive than the inner planets, which means that have stronger more far-reaching gravitational fields. That in turn makes them more likely to capture odd collections of rock in the solar system.
Yes, Neptune is the last gassy planet in the solar system.
Uranus and Neptune are bluish gas planets.
yes the rings are full of gassy rocks which orbit around the planet
Jupiter and Saturn are the two gassy planets with lots of moons.
Jupiter is the most gassy planet in our solar system. It is mainly composed of hydrogen and helium gases, with a small rocky core at its center.
Jupiter is a gassy planet, that is why it is called The Gas Giant.
No because the inner planets are made of rocky and hard substances and the outer planets are made of gassy lighter substances.
Jupiter.
Mercury is a rock planet; it is solid. Any planet to the left of the asteroid belt (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) are rock planets, or terrestrial planets, while any planet to the right of the asteroid belt are gaseous (Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus).
well genuis, there are the "rocky planets" and the "gassy planets"
No, they have no solid surface to land on and would just get sucked into the center of the planet due to the immense gravity.
rocky