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A proposal that diamonds may also form in Jupiter and Saturn, where the concentration of carbon is far lower, was considered unlikely because the diamonds would quickly dissolve. [16] Experiments looking for conversion of methane to diamonds found weak signals and did not reach the temperatures and pressures expected in Uranus and Neptune.
Jupiter's troposphere contains a complicated cloud structure. [20] The upper clouds, located in the pressure range 0.6–0.9 bar, are made of ammonia ice. [21] Below these ammonia ice clouds, denser clouds made of ammonium hydrosulfide ((NH 4)SH) or ammonium sulfide ((NH 4) 2 S, between 1–2 bar) and water (3–7 bar) are thought to exist.
Neptune, like Uranus, is an ice giant, a subclass of giant planet, because they are smaller and have higher concentrations of volatiles than Jupiter and Saturn. [73] In the search for exoplanets , Neptune has been used as a metonym : discovered bodies of similar mass are often referred to as "Neptunes", [ 74 ] just as scientists refer to ...
Scientists have finally discovered how sheets of diamond rain form on the ice giants, Neptune and Uranus. The answer could explain why Neptune’s core is hot. On Neptune and Uranus, Diamonds Rain ...
The researchers used plastic to recreate precipitation believed to form deep inside ice giant planets Uranus and Neptune. Diamonds rain from the sky on billions of planets, new research shows Skip ...
Jupiter's moons were classified into four groups of four, based on their similar orbital elements. [204] This picture has been complicated by the discovery of numerous small outer moons since 1999. Jupiter's moons are divided into several different groups, although there are two known moons which are not part of any group (Themisto and Valetudo ...
In science class, we always learned that all the planets in our solar system orbit around the sun. Scientists have figured out this is not necessarily true.
Because during their formation Uranus and Neptune incorporated their material as either ice or gas trapped in water ice, the term ice giant came into use. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] In the early 1970s, the terminology became popular in the science fiction community, e.g., Bova (1971), [ 5 ] but the earliest scientific usage of the terminology was likely by ...