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Saturn giant planets

Our solar system consists of the Sun, the planets and their moon satellites, asteroids (small planets), comets, and meteorites. The planets are generally divided into two categories Earth-like (terrestrial) planets—Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars and Giant planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Little is known about Pluto, the most remote planet from Earth. [Pg.444]

The gas giant planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. The planet Pluto has a status of its own, and has recently been renamed a dwarf planet. [Pg.43]

Although Uranus and Neptune also belong to the group of gas giant planets, they are constructed differently from Jupiter and Saturn ... [Pg.57]

To the accuracy of the measurement of molecular weights for the giant planets, only hydrogen and helium have significant abundances. The relative proportions of these elements, expressed as the molar fraction He/H, are 0.068+0.002 for Jupiter, 0.068+0.013 for Saturn, 0.076+0.016 for Uranus, and 0.100+0.016 for Neptune (Lunine, 2004). None of these ratios are like those of the nebula (0.085, Table 4.1). [Pg.507]

Models of the interiors of the giant planets depend on assumed temperature-pressure-density relationships that are not very well constrained. Models for Jupiter and Saturn feature concentric layers (from the outside inward) of molecular hydrogen, metallic hydrogen, and ice, perhaps with small cores of rock (rocky cores are permissible but not required by current data). Uranus and Neptune models are similar, except that there is no metallic hydrogen, the interior layers of ice are thicker, and the rocky cores are relatively larger. [Pg.509]

Isotopic abundances for hydrogen have been measured in giant planet atmospheres, as shown in Figure 14.11. The D/H ratios in Jupiter and Saturn are similar to those in the Sun, but lower than those in the Earth s oceans or in comets. D/H ratios in Uranus and Neptune... [Pg.509]

Studies of the gas content of protoplanetary disks with ages between 1 and 30 Myr are necessary to determine how rapidly the gas disperses and make a more direct comparison to the evolution and dispersal of dust in disks. As we discussed in Section 9.1.2, the dispersal of gaseous disks also provides an upper limit for the formation time of giant planets that can be compared to the time necessary to form Jupiter and Saturn in our Solar System. From a Solar System perspective it is interesting to expand on the constraints placed on the gas dispersal from the age determination of meteorites with implantation of solar wind, which provide us a... [Pg.291]

The giant planets, especially Jupiter and Saturn, significantly influenced accretion in the inner Solar System, with important consequences for the properties of the terrestrial planets, described in Section 10.4.1. The influence of the giant planets is especially strong in the Asteroid Belt. Given that meteorites are our primary samples of primitive Solar System material, understanding the role of dynamical and collisional processes in the formation and evolution of the Asteroid Belt is of fundamental importance for theories of planet formation (Section 10.4.2). [Pg.321]

Planetary-mass bodies probably formed in the Asteroid Belt and were responsible for its dynamical excitation, radial mixing, and mass depletion. The orbits of these bodies became unstable once Jupiter and Saturn formed. These objects and most remaining planetesimals fell into the Sun or were ejected from the Solar System. The Asteroid Belt may have been further depleted when the giant planets passed through a resonance before reaching their current orbits. The Asteroid Belt has lost relatively little mass due to collisional erosion, and most asteroids >100 km in diameter are probably primordial. [Pg.329]

Modern telescopic and spacecraft study of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, their properties, and their systems of rings, moons, and magnetospheres, has been the purview of the planetary scientist with little connection to the universe beyond until 1995, when the first extrasolar giant planet was discovered. Now the solar system s giants are the best-studied example of a class of some 100 objects which—while only one has been measured for size and hence density—may be present 10% of Sun-like stars. [Pg.616]


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