This is because the gas giants are a lot further away from the sun than we are and therefore the incident sunlight rays reaching the surface are less therefore making the surface gases on these planets cool. The reason that the gases closer to the planets core are hotter has to do with the enormous gravity of these gas giants. The sun too is a gas giant only it is much larger and this tells us something. The suns center is also much hotter than its surface because of the tremendous pressures according to Boyle's law the temperature rises when pressure increases if the volume remains the same. If the gas giants were as big as the sun, then they would reach critical mass and ignite too! But they aren't as big and so their cores just get hot, but not hot enough for fusion. Corey Wood
becuz the warmness dosnt get all the way to t5he outness
Gas giants like Jupiter do not have a solid surface, so there is no clear boundary where the atmosphere ends and the surface begins. Instead, the gas giant's atmosphere becomes progressively denser as you move towards its core, gradually transitioning from gas to liquid under high pressures.
no
from rocks being melted in the earths core, it then gets pushed up and the pressurre builds, the a volcanic erupiton takes place due to the pressure from the outer core/mantle, strange but true
the core is more than a thousand times hotter than the surface.
becuz the warmness dosnt get all the way to t5he outness
Gas giants are primarily made up of hydrogen and helium, with small amounts of other gases such as methane and ammonia. They have no solid surface and their atmosphere becomes increasingly dense towards the core.
They're called gas giants because of this fact.
In general, the temperature decreases towards the surface.
false i took an assesment today and its false hope this helps
True. Gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn do not have a solid surface; instead, they are composed mostly of gases such as hydrogen and helium. However, they are believed to have a dense, solid core made up of rock and metal at their centers.
Gas giants like Jupiter do not have a solid surface, so there is no clear boundary where the atmosphere ends and the surface begins. Instead, the gas giant's atmosphere becomes progressively denser as you move towards its core, gradually transitioning from gas to liquid under high pressures.
Saturn, like other gas giants, does not have a solid surface with distinct crust, mantle, and core layers like terrestrial planets. Instead, it is predominantly made up of hydrogen and helium gases with no solid surface. Its interior is composed of layers of gas that transition into a dense, metallic hydrogen layer towards the core.
Convection occurs in the outer layer of the sun, known as the convective zone. In this region, hot plasma rises towards the surface, cools down, and then sinks back towards the interior in a continuous cycle. This process helps transfer heat from the sun's core to its surface.
Gravity attracts things toward the core, or centre, of the Earth, that's how everything is able to stay on the surface.
They are called gas giants, actually. They are called that, because they have a very thick atmosphere and the core is so deep below the 'surface' of the atmosphere that we cannot see the core.
Gas giants do not have solid surfaces like terrestrial planets do. Instead, their outer layers consist mainly of dense gases, such as hydrogen and helium. As you descend towards the core of a gas giant, the pressure and temperature increase immensely, but it does not transition to a solid surface.