Are gas giants worth scanning?

Most gas giants are worth comparatively few credits when scanned and probed, including those with ammonia or water-based life. The exceptions to this are Class II gas giants, the data for which will fetch a decent price with Universal Cartographics.

How do you identify a gas giant?

A gas giant is a large planet mostly composed of helium and/or hydrogen. These planets, like Jupiter and Saturn in our solar system, don’t have hard surfaces and instead have swirling gases above a solid core.

What is a Class 2 gas giant?

Gaseous giants in class II are too warm to form ammonia clouds; instead their clouds are made up of water vapor. Even though the clouds on such a planet would be similar to those of Earth, the atmosphere would still consist mainly of hydrogen and hydrogen-rich molecules such as methane.

Are gas giants likely to have a large atmosphere?

Astronomers think the giants first formed as rocky and icy planets similar to terrestrial planets. This likely explains why they are smaller than those two planets. On a percentage basis, their atmospheres are more “polluted” with heavier elements such as methane and ammonia because they are so much smaller.

Can you map gas giants?

There’s definitely no reason currently to map a gas giant that already has the First Mapped tag claimed by someone else.

Can gas giants be mined?

While atmospheric mining of outer planets has not yet begun and would be difficult with current technology, there is some consensus that the technical challenges are not insurmountable. Of the outer planets, Uranus and Neptune would be the easiest planets to mine for gas due to their smaller gravity well.

What are 3 characteristics of gas giants?

Unlike terrestrial planets whose composition is rocky, gas giants have a mostly gaseous composition, such as hydrogen and helium. They do have some rocky material, although this is most often found in the planet core. The four gas giants are (in order of distance from the Sun): Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

Can you land on a gas giant?

A gas giant is a large planet that is not primarily composed of rock or other solid matter. One cannot “land on” such planets in the traditional sense. There are four gas giants in our solar system: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

Is Jupiter a failed star?

“Jupiter is called a failed star because it is made of the same elements (hydrogen and helium) as is the Sun, but it is not massive enough to have the internal pressure and temperature necessary to cause hydrogen to fuse to helium, the energy source that powers the sun and most other stars.

What is a class 9 gas giant?

A class 7 gas giant A class 9 gas giant A class J gas giant. A gas giant is a huge planet made entirely of base gases, including fluorine, methane, and ammonia. They do not possess a solid surface, but rather have dense atmospheres.

Can gas giants evolve life?

In terms of life developing on a gas giant? Sure, it’s possible. At best you could have some form of single cell extremophile organism in the uppermost atmosphere. Even this however is unlikely, as Gas Giants are stupidly hot; what their outer atmospheres lack in heat they make up for in cell crushing pressure.

Do all gas giants have rings?

All four gas giants have rings and moons. Saturn’s rings, made of mostly ice, are the most spectacular, and the only ones known before the 1970s. As of 2004, Jupiter was thought to have the most moons, with more than sixty discovered!


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