Neptune By: Gigi Hartzell
Neptune's Symbol
How Neptune got its name Neptune was named after the roman god of the sea It first got called “the planet exterior to Uranus” and Johann Galle wanted to name it Janus. Another suggestion was Oceanus. Urbain Le Verrier, who discovered Neptune claimed the right to name his discovery and he names it Neptune.
Discovery Johann Galle and D’Arrest discovered it in September 23, 1846 Johann Galle Heinrich D’Arrest
Planet Measurements Masss: 102.4E24 Volume: 62,525,703,987,421 Km3 Density: 1,640 Neptune would float because it is so light Gravity: 11.15ft/s2
Composition of the atmosphere Mostly made up of hydrogen, helium, and some methane Methane is what makes Neptune blue
Distances 8th planet from the sun 4,496.6km from the sun 2,680,000,000 from earth
Orbit and rotatin It takes 60,190 days to orbit the sun That is 164.8 earth years It takes .67 to rotate on its own axis Thats 19.1 hours
Temperature Average temp is -353 degres F It is much colder on Neptune then it is on earth and in florida
Composition and Appearance Its is known as a Gas Giant The internal composition is a rocky core made up of iron and other metal The out side has a blue tint. It has a slushy ice and water layer. It is air and gassy and you cold not step foot on it with out starting to sink down.
Rings There are 4 rings on Neptune What they are made out of is unknown The rings are very dark
Water Water freezes and goes into a slushy watery mixture on the surface.
Weather There are lots of clouds There are storms Neptune has the worst weather They have Cold icy brutal storms alot
Moons 13 known moons They all have names They were all discovered between 1846-2002
What would happen if a human traveled to neptune You would be crushed by the atmosphere You would slowly sink to the center And when you got to the core what ever was left of you would burn up because the center is so hot
Neptune May Be a Giant Diamond With Neptune's Gravity that squeezes on the planet, scientists found that Neptune's methane would decompose, with some of the hydrogen atoms breaking away and leaving the carbon to be compressed into pure, tiny diamonds.
citations Coffey, Jerry. "How Did Neptune Get Its Name." Universe Today RSS. N.p., 12 Mar. 2012. Web. 19 Dec. 2013. "Aliens & Space." Science Channel. N.p., 2013. Web. 19 Dec. 2013. "Neptune." L Facts, Pictures and Information. N.p., 1994. Web. 31 Dec. 2013. <http://nineplanets.org/neptune.html>. Sword, Betty. "Welcome to the Planets: Neptune." Welcome to the Planets: Neptune. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Jan. 2014. <http://pds.jpl.nasa.gov/planets/choices/neptune1.htm>. Davis, Phil. "Solar System Exploration: Planets: Neptune: Overview." Solar System Exploration: Planets: Neptune: Overview. Greg Baerg, 25 Oct. 2013. Web. 31 Dec. 2013. <http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Neptune>.