Neptune

Neptune

1. Basic Facts

  • Position: 8th planet from the Sun

  • Distance from Sun: About 4.5 billion km (30 astronomical units)

  • Diameter: ~49,244 km (almost 4 times Earth’s diameter)

  • Mass: 17 times Earth’s mass

  • Orbital period: 164.8 Earth years

  • Rotation period: About 16 hours (a Neptune day)

  • Surface temperature: Average around −214 °C (−353 °F)

  • Discovered: 1846 by Johann Galle and Urbain Le Verrier


2. Composition and Structure

  • Neptune is an ice giant, primarily made of:

    • Hydrogen and helium (like Jupiter and Saturn)

    • “Ices” such as water, ammonia, and methane in the interior

  • It has a small rocky core.

  • Methane in the upper atmosphere gives Neptune its striking deep blue color.


3. Atmosphere

  • The atmosphere is mainly hydrogen, helium, and methane.

  • Extreme winds blow up to 2,100 km/h (1,300 mph), the fastest in the solar system.

  • Known for large storms, such as the Great Dark Spot, a massive storm similar to Jupiter’s Great Red Spot but darker.


4. Magnetic Field

  • Neptune has a magnetic field about 27 times stronger than Earth's.

  • The field is tilted relative to its rotation axis and offset from the planet’s center, suggesting a complex interior structure.


5. Moons

  • Neptune has 14 known moons.

  • The largest moon is Triton, which is geologically active and has geysers that emit nitrogen gas.

  • Triton orbits Neptune in a retrograde direction (opposite to Neptune’s rotation), suggesting it was a captured object.


6. Rings

  • Neptune has a faint system of rings composed mostly of dust particles and small rocks.

  • These rings are dark and incomplete, unlike the bright rings of Saturn.


7. Exploration

  • So far, Neptune has been visited once by spacecraft: Voyager 2 in 1989.

  • Voyager 2 gave us most of what we know today about Neptune’s atmosphere, rings, moons, and magnetic field.


8. Interesting Facts

  • Neptune was predicted mathematically before it was seen because of irregularities in Uranus’s orbit.

  • It is the coldest planet in the Solar System.

  • Despite being far from the Sun, Neptune emits more internal heat than it receives.

Note: All information provided on the site is unofficial. You can get official information from the websites of relevant state organizations