The surface of Neptune is known to be the most dynamic and active place in the Solar System. Neptune is one of the planets that hold a lot of energy and heat. If you look at a picture of Neptune, you see this pretty blue-green surface. That surface looks solid, but it is actually not solid. It is made out of gas. So what we actually see in the picture is not the surface of Neptune, but it is the top of the clouds of Neptune. You might want to walk or stand on Neptune but this is impossible.
In ancient times, people didn’t even
know the planet Neptune existed. Astronomers, scientists who study space, didn’t
discover the big blue planet until the 1840s.
Neptune is usually the eighth
planet from the Sun. So far as astronomers know, only the planet Pluto is
farther from the Sun. However, Pluto’s orbit sometimes brings it closer to the
Sun than Neptune is, making Neptune the planet farthest from the Sun. This
happens every 248 years.
HOW DID WE FIND NEPTUNE?
Astronomers found Neptune by
watching the planet Uranus. Uranus wobbles as it orbits the Sun. A British
astronomer and a French astronomer used math to figure out that the gravity of
another planet was making Uranus wobble. A German astronomer finally saw Neptune
through a telescope in 1846. Astronomers named the newly found planet Neptune
after the ancient Roman god of the sea.
STUDYING NEPTUNE
It took astronomers a long time to
learn anything about Neptune because the planet is so far away. Neptune is about
2.8 billion miles (about 4.5 billion kilometers) from the Sun. That’s 30 times
as far as Earth is from the Sun! It takes Neptune almost 165 years to go around
the Sun once.
Looking through telescopes,
astronomers can tell that Neptune is a big planet. It is about four times larger
than Earth. They call Neptune a giant planet. It is the smallest of four huge
planets made mostly of gas. Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus are the other gas
giants.
Astronomers learned most of what
they know about Neptune from a spacecraft named Voyager 2. Voyager 2 is the only
spacecraft that has visited Neptune. It flew past in 1989. It took pictures and
made measurements of Neptune.
Astronomers also study pictures of
Neptune made by the Hubble Space Telescope. Hubble orbits high above Earth.
WHAT IS IT LIKE ON NEPTUNE?
You could not breathe on Neptune,
and the fierce winds would blow you away. Even without the winds, you could not
walk on Neptune because the planet has no solid surface.
A thick layer of clouds surrounds
Neptune. The clouds are part of the planet’s atmosphere. An atmosphere is made
of gases. Neptune’s atmosphere is made mostly of hydrogen and helium gases. Some
methane gas high in the atmosphere gives Neptune its bluish color. You could not
breathe the gases in Neptune’s atmosphere. You need to breathe oxygen in order
to live. There is no oxygen in Neptune’s atmosphere.
Surface of Neptune |
Blowing clouds make striped
patterns around Neptune. Sometimes there are spots in the clouds. The spots are
storms. Neptune has the fastest winds in the solar system. The winds on Neptune
can blow at 1,200 miles per hour (2,000 kilometers per hour).
Scientists have made guesses about
what the inside of Neptune is like. Scientists think the planet’s thick
atmosphere blends into an ocean of water. The core (center) of Neptune may be
made of ice and rock.
DOES NEPTUNE HAVE MOONS?
Astronomers have found 13 moons
around Neptune. The biggest moon is Triton. Triton is mostly made of ice. There
may be some rock in its core. Triton is one of the coldest spots in the solar
system. The temperature there can drop to -390° Fahrenheit (–235° Celsius).
Triton once had volcanoes. Its
volcanoes did not shoot out melted rock as volcanoes on Earth do. Triton’s
volcanoes shot out slushy, half-melted ice.
Astronomers also have found four
rings around Neptune. The rings are dark and hard to see, even in pictures from
Voyager 2. They may be made of dust and rocks.
HOW DID NEPTUNE FORM?
Astronomers think the Sun and all
the planets formed from a disk of gas and tiny particles of rock, metal, and
ice. The rocky planets closest to the Sun formed mainly from rock and metal. The
planets farthest from the Sun formed mostly from gas and chunks of ice.
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