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  2. Gas giant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_giant

    A gas giant is a giant planet composed mainly of hydrogen and helium. [1] Jupiter and Saturn are the gas giants of the Solar System. The term "gas giant" was originally synonymous with "giant planet". However, in the 1990s, it became known that Uranus and Neptune are really a distinct class of giant planets, being composed mainly of heavier ...

  3. Uranus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranus

    Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun. It is a gaseous cyan -coloured ice giant. Most of the planet is made of water, ammonia, and methane in a supercritical phase of matter, astronomy calls "ice" or volatiles. The planet's atmosphere has a complex layered cloud structure and has the lowest minimum temperature of 49 K (−224 °C; −371 ...

  4. Circumstellar disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumstellar_disc

    Circumstellar discs HD 141943 and HD 191089.The bottom images are illustrations of above real images. A circumstellar disc (or circumstellar disk) is a torus, pancake or ring-shaped accretion disk of matter composed of gas, dust, planetesimals, asteroids, or collision fragments in orbit around a star.

  5. Sudarsky's gas giant classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudarsky's_gas_giant...

    Sudarsky's classification of gas giants for the purpose of predicting their appearance based on their temperature was outlined by David Sudarsky and colleagues in the paper Albedo and Reflection Spectra of Extrasolar Giant Planets [1] and expanded on in Theoretical Spectra and Atmospheres of Extrasolar Giant Planets, [2] published before any ...

  6. Jupiter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jupiter

    Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the largest in the Solar System.A gas giant, Jupiter's mass is more than two and a half times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined and slightly less than one one-thousandth the mass of the Sun. Jupiter orbits the Sun at a distance of 5.20 AU (778.5 Gm) with an orbital period of 11.86 years.

  7. Super-Jupiter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Jupiter

    A super-Jupiter is a gas giant exoplanet that is more massive than the planet Jupiter. For example, companions at the planet– brown dwarf borderline have been called super-Jupiters, such as around the star Kappa Andromedae. [1] By 2011 there were 180 known super-Jupiters, some hot, some cold. [2] Even though they are more massive than Jupiter ...

  8. Hot Jupiter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Jupiter

    Hot Jupiter. An artist's impression of a hot Jupiter orbiting close to its star. Hot Jupiters (sometimes called hot Saturns) are a class of gas giant exoplanets that are inferred to be physically similar to Jupiter but that have very short orbital periods ( P < 10 days ). [1] The close proximity to their stars and high surface-atmosphere ...

  9. Tyche (hypothetical planet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyche_(hypothetical_planet)

    Tyche (hypothetical planet) Tyche / ˈtaɪki / was a hypothetical gas giant located in the Solar System 's Oort cloud, first proposed in 1999 by astrophysicists John Matese, Patrick Whitman and Daniel Whitmire of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. [1] [2] They argued that evidence of Tyche's existence could be seen in a supposed bias in ...