Part of ScienceEarth and spaceYear 5
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Explore the solar system's gas planets and learn about their properties.
Narrator: Further from the Sun, in the outer reaches of the solar system, we find the gas planets.
Much larger than the rocky planets, these cosmic giants are accompanied by numerous moons.
Jupiter, famous for its red spot, is the largest, followed by Saturn with its rings made of ice, rock and dust.
Uranus and Neptune come next.
Whilst unmanned spacecraft have approached the gas planets, actual landings are not possible because of the lack of solid surfaces.
What? What鈥檚 this?
Stella: Don鈥檛 land on them now,
They鈥檙e not very stable,
They鈥檙e gaseous balls,
Don鈥檛 land on them now,
They鈥檙e hydrogen and helium,
They鈥檝e no surface at all,
They鈥檙e not like a table,
In fact they鈥檝e got no surface at all!
No surface at all!
Neptune has the longest orbit of the Sun. It takes 1,979 Earth months!
Saturn's largest moon is called Titan.
The surface of these planets is made of two gases: hydrogen and helium.
Research one of the gas planets and create a fact file or poster about your chosen planet. Can you make any comparisons with Earth?
Could humans live on a gas planet and survive?
Try to write down five different reasons and explain why.
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