The size depends on the planet! For example, Jupiter is 86,881 mi (139,822 km) in diameter.
neptune is the third bigest planet from the solar system
Saturn is the answer. There you go! The answer is within your hands!
Saturn because of size and the amount of gas
Saturn is a gas giant. It is also blue, and it revolves sideways.
Under the current definition of a planet, yes it can! If a gas giant were to share its orbit with other objects of significant mass (other than moons, comets or asteroids), it would definitely qualify as a dwarf planet. In order to be a planet, it would have to "clear the neighborhood" until it was the dominate influence in its orbit.
neptune is the third bigest planet from the solar system
Venus is a rocky planet similar to earth in size, gravity, and bulk composition.
Saturn is the answer. There you go! The answer is within your hands!
Saturn because of size and the amount of gas
The farthest currently recognized planet is Neptune, which is a gas giant primarily made of hydrogen and helium.
a gas planet
Well, there are two types planets in our solar system. Four rocky planets and four huge gas planets. Go to any planet chart add up the rocky planets size and divide that by four. Now, do the very same thing with the gas planets Viola!!!
Venus is a 'rocky' planet, with a dense atmosphere, very roughly the same size as earth, the planet that can approach closest to the earth, and the brightest one in our sky.
Saturn is a gaseous planet. The solid planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. The gas planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Pluto (which is also solid) is no longer classified as a planet.
It isn't a dwarf planet, it's six times the size of earth and is classed as a gas giant, and it is mostly composed of gases.
The smallest gas giant planet in our solar system is Neptune.
Saturn is a gas giant. It is also blue, and it revolves sideways.