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*artist's
drawing |

average
distance
from the Sun:
4,504,000,000 km
diameter: 30,707 miles = 49,528 km
mass: about 102,800,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kg
temperature: -360 F at the cloud tops
number of moons: 8
any rings? yes (but very faint)
length of a year: 164.73 of our years
length of a day: 16.11 hours
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One of the Gas Giants, Neptune has a
large rocky core that is surrounded by highly compressed water. The
"surface" is an ocean of liquid hydrogen and helium.

Definitely not. Just like Jupiter,
there's no surface to stand on... You'd have to swim around in an ocean
of liquid hydrogen and helium. There's no oxygen to breathe or water to
drink.


To escape Neptune's gravity and get
out into space, a rocket has to travel at a speed of 52,800 mph or 23.6
km/sec. That's about 812 times faster than your parents are allowed to
drive on a U.S. highway!

Naiad, Thalassa, Despina, Galatea, Larissa,
Proteus, Triton, and Nereid.
Triton is the only really decent sized moon. It was
discovered way back in 1846. The other moons are pretty small, so no one
could see them with a telescope back then.
In 1949, Nereid was discovered and it wasn't until
our flying robot explorer, Voyager 2 flew by that the rest of the moons
were seen for the first time!
Neptune has a pretty wild atmosphere.
In 1989, one of our flying robot explorers, Voyager 2 took a close-up
picture of a big storm on Neptune that we called the Great Dark Spot.
(It was a lot like Jupiter's Great Red Spot.) In 1994, we took another
picture on Neptune with our Hubble Space Telescope and the Great Dark
Spot was GONE! (Jupiter's storm has been there for something like 300
years!)
We've also taken
picture of clouds on Neptune that look similar to our cirrus clouds
(like cotton stripes).
With
Neptune and Uranus being so much alike, why does Neptune have storms and
clouds and Uranus doesn't? Well, part of the reason is that Neptune is
still contracting - this means it's getting smaller. Planets do this
when they are forming. This contracting generates heat. Mixing this heat
with Neptune's cold atmosphere causes all sorts of weather stuff like
clouds and storms.
Here's the coolest thing: SCIENTISTS
THINK THAT IT IS RAINING GIANT DIAMONDS ON NEPTUNE!! That's right -
raining diamonds! A simulation of Neptune's atmosphere was recently done
at University of California, Berkeley... and it produced diamond dust.
So, they think with all the carbon in Neptune's atmosphere and the
extreme pressure on that planet that it may be, literally, raining giant
diamonds! We think that this is the absolute
COOLEST thing in the entire solar system!
Sources:
In Quest of the Universe, 2nd ed. by Karl F. Kuhn
Voyages Through the Universe, 2nd ed. by Fraknoi, Morrison and Wolff
Universe by Kaufmann
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Astronomy by Christopher De Pree and Alan
Axelrod
The Astronomy Cafe by Sten Odenwald