The outer planets
Terrestrial planets have terra firma, a.k.a. hard ground. The gas giants are giant balls of gas.
They are all made up of gases. The outer planets are nicknamed "gas giants" because they are massive object rotating around the sun that are essentially huge balls of gas with dense metal cores:)
My balls. They lay a nuclear active radiated gas that explains the whole theory.
Stars are hotter than planets. Stars are massive balls of gas that produce heat and light through nuclear reactions in their cores, while planets do not produce their own heat and rely on the heat they receive from the star they orbit.
No. Gas planets do not have solid surfaces.
These are the four outer gas giant planets; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Terrestrial planets have terra firma, a.k.a. hard ground. The gas giants are giant balls of gas.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune
Because some planets are solid and others with rings are just huge balls of gas sometimes called gas giants
The inner planets are like big rocks. The outer planets are like big balls of gas.
The inner planets are small rocky bodies, whereas the outer planets are gas giants, large balls of gas with ring systems and a large quantity of Moons.
Gas giants, such as Jupiter and Saturn, are composed mainly of gases such as hydrogen and helium. These planets lack solid surfaces and have dense atmospheres that extend deep into their interiors. Their cores are believed to be small and surrounded by layers of gas.
They are all made up of gases. The outer planets are nicknamed "gas giants" because they are massive object rotating around the sun that are essentially huge balls of gas with dense metal cores:)
Planets are celestial bodies that orbit a star, composed of rock, gas, or a combination of both. Gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn are primarily made up of gases like hydrogen and helium, whereas terrestrial planets like Earth and Mars have solid surfaces with rocky compositions.
Planets are pretty much just big rocks or gas balls orbiting their sun. They are just there, until their sun explodes or another big rock hits them and destroys them.
My balls. They lay a nuclear active radiated gas that explains the whole theory.
No. The planets Mercury through Mars are rocky, and are solid. Planets Jupiter through Neptune are huge balls of gas. Pluto (Which I will always regard as a planet regardless of what other scientists say), is also a rocky planet.