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Gas Giant Collection (page 2)

"Exploring the Majestic Gas Giants: A Journey through our Solar System's Enigmatic Giants" Step into the mesmerizing world of gas giants

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien landscape and planets, artwork C016 / 6345

Alien landscape and planets, artwork C016 / 6345
Alien landscape and planets. Artwork of the view from a moon of a gas giant extrasolar planet. Such planets are detected by a variety of methods

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien landscape and nebulae, artwork

Alien landscape and nebulae, artwork
Alien landscape and planet. Artwork of the view from a moon of a gas giant extrasolar planet (top right), with another moon at lower right. Such planets are detected by a variety of methods

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien landscape and planet, artwork C016 / 6346

Alien landscape and planet, artwork C016 / 6346
Alien landscape and planet. Artwork of the view from a moon of a gas giant extrasolar planet. Such planets are detected by a variety of methods

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien landscape and planet, artwork C016 / 6343

Alien landscape and planet, artwork C016 / 6343
Alien landscape and planet. Artwork of the view from a moon of an ringed gas giant extrasolar planet. Such planets are detected by a variety of methods

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien landscape and planet, artwork C016 / 6347

Alien landscape and planet, artwork C016 / 6347
Alien landscape and planet. Artwork of the view from a moon of a gas giant extrasolar planet. Such planets are detected by a variety of methods

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Uranus from space, artwork C017 / 7371

Uranus from space, artwork C017 / 7371
Uranus from space. Computer artwork of the planet Uranus. Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun and the least massive of the gas giants. Its mass is roughly 14.5 times that of the Earth

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Uranus from space, artwork C017 / 7372

Uranus from space, artwork C017 / 7372
Uranus from space. Computer artwork of the planet Uranus. Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun and the least massive of the gas giants. Its mass is roughly 14.5 times that of the Earth

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Jupiter and Earth, artwork C017 / 7245

Jupiter and Earth, artwork C017 / 7245
Jupiter and Earth. Computer artwork comparing the size of the planet Jupiter (large) with the Earth (small). Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Saturn and Mimas from space, artwork C017 / 7354

Saturn and Mimas from space, artwork C017 / 7354
Saturn and Mimas from space. Computer artwork showing the planet Saturn (upper right) with Mimas (lower left), one of its moons

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planetary system, artwork C014 / 0567

Alien planetary system, artwork C014 / 0567
Alien planetary system. Computer artwork of a view across the surface of a hypothetical moon in orbit around the planet HD 18853 Ab (upper left), with three suns (bright)

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Solar system planetary orbits, artwork

Solar system planetary orbits, artwork. The Sun is at centre, with planetary orbits marked by blue ellipses. The four rocky planets of the inner solar system, moving outwards from the Sun

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planet HD 189733b and stellar flare

Alien planet HD 189733b and stellar flare. Artwork of the exoplanet HD 189733b seen from its moon during a stellar flare. This Jupiter-sized planet is around 63 light years away in the constellation

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Von Neumann probe at planet, artwork C015 / 0805

Von Neumann probe at planet, artwork C015 / 0805
Von Neumann probe at planet. Artwork of a self-replicating spacecraft (upper left) exploring a distant alien world. This type of self-replicating spacecraft

Background imageGas Giant Collection: T Cha system and dust ring, artwork C014 / 5045

T Cha system and dust ring, artwork C014 / 5045
T Cha system and dust ring. Artwork showing the dusty ring and disc (blue) surrounding the young star T Cha (bright object, upper left)

Background imageGas Giant Collection: HR 8799 planetary system, artwork C015 / 0794

HR 8799 planetary system, artwork C015 / 0794
HR 8799 planetary system. Diagram of the orbits (green) of three of the planets of the HR 8799 star. Discovered in 2008, these were the first extrasolar planets directly observed

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Exoplanet types, artwork C016 / 5354

Exoplanet types, artwork C016 / 5354
Exoplanet types. Artwork of a range of types of extrasolar planets that have been discovered beyond our Solar System. These exoplanets range from very large gas giant planets (upper right)

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Solar system planets, artwork C013 / 9499

Solar system planets, artwork C013 / 9499
Solar system planets, artwork. The eight planets and Pluto (not longer a planet) are shown here in their order from the Sun from top to bottom

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planetary system, artwork C013 / 8961

Alien planetary system, artwork C013 / 8961
Alien planetary system. Computer artwork of a view across an Earth-like alien moon towards its brown dwarf gas giant planet in the background

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planetary system, artwork C013 / 8960

Alien planetary system, artwork C013 / 8960
Alien planetary system. Computer artwork of a view across an alien moon about to be impacted by a large asteroid (left), with a brown dwarf gas giant planet (large, centre right) in the background

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planetary system, artwork C013 / 8947

Alien planetary system, artwork C013 / 8947
Alien planetary system. Computer artwork of a view across an alien moon that is on a collision course with another moon. A gas giant planet is in the background

Background imageGas Giant Collection: SATURN AND EARTH, 1873. The planet Saturn compared in size with the Earth

SATURN AND EARTH, 1873. The planet Saturn compared in size with the Earth. Wood engraving, American, 1873

Background imageGas Giant Collection: SATURN, 1885. Wood engraving, 1885

SATURN, 1885. Wood engraving, 1885

Background imageGas Giant Collection: SATURN, 19TH CENTURY. Line engraving

SATURN, 19TH CENTURY. Line engraving

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Flying aliens, artwork

Flying aliens, artwork
Flying aliens. Artwork of hypothetical alien life forms in the atmosphere of a gas giant planet. It is thought that under such conditions, like those found on Jupiter or Saturn

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Galileo spacecraft burning up in Jupiter

Galileo spacecraft burning up in Jupiters upper atmosphere, artwork. The Galileo spacecraft was launched in 1989, and entered orbit around Jupiter in 1995 to study the Jovian system

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Jupiter from Io

Jupiter from Io, artwork. Io, the third largest of the moons of Jupiter, is also one of the closest (422, 000 kilometres)

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Saturn from Titan

Saturn from Titan. Artwork of a mountainous scene on Titan, the largest satellite of Saturn (upper left). Titan is known to have traces of complex hydrocarbon compounds in its nitrogen atmosphere

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Uranus

Uranus. Computer artwork of Uranus, the seventh planet from the Sun. Uranus is a gas giant, composed mostly of hydrogen and helium with some methane. It has a diameter four times that of the Earth

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Volcano on Io

Volcano on Io
Volcano erupting on Io, artwork. Io, the third largest of the moons of Jupiter, is one of the closest (422, 000 kilometres)

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Neptune

Neptune. Computer artwork of a possible scene below clouds on the planet Neptune. Neptune, a gas giant, is the eighth planet from the Sun

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Titan landscape

Titan landscape. Artwork of the surface of Titan, the largest moon of the ringed planet Saturn (left). Titan is known to have traces of complex hydrocarbon compounds in its nitrogen atmosphere

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Saturn from Rhea

Saturn from Rhea. Computer artwork of the ringed gas giant plant Saturn (centre left) seen from the cratered surface of Rhea, one of its moons

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Saturn

Saturn. Artwork of the planet Saturn and its moons seen from space. Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun. It has a diameter nearly ten times that of Earth and a volume of over 800 Earths

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Ring galaxy

Ring galaxy

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planet and asteroid, artwork

Alien planet and asteroid, artwork
Alien planet and asteroid. Computer artwork of an asteroid (foreground), an alien (extrasolar) planet (middle ground) and the star the planet is orbiting (background)

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Alien planets

Alien planets. Computer artwork of alien planets and moons. Several such planets have been detected orbiting nearby stars in our galaxy

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Super-Jovian planet

Super-Jovian planet. Computer artwork of a large gas giant planet (left) orbiting a star. Numerous such planets, with masses greater than that of Jupiter, have been discovered orbiting nearby stars

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Gas giant around a young star

Gas giant around a young star, artwork. The star is seen shining through the plane of the disc of gas and dust from which the planet formed. Numerous smaller bodies are seen around the planet

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Extrasolar planetary system

Extrasolar planetary system. Artwork of a gas giant orbiting a star outside our solar system, viewed from its cratered moon

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Ancient planet in M4 globular cluster

Ancient planet in M4 globular cluster
Ancient planet. Artwork of a 13 billion-year-old gas giant planet with a rich background of stars in its home, the M4 globular star cluster

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Gas giant seen from its moon, artwork

Gas giant seen from its moon, artwork
Gas giant planet (upper right) seen from the surface of one of its moons, computer artwork. Light from the parent star is seen shining over the moons horizon at lower right

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Gas giant seen from its moon

Gas giant seen from its moon
Gas giant planet seen from the surface of one of its moons, artwork. The parent star is seen shining through the planets ring system at centre left, on the horizon

Background imageGas Giant Collection: 70 Ophiuchi planet

70 Ophiuchi planet. Computer artwork of a hypothetical gas giant planet orbiting one of the stars in the 70 Ophiuchi binary star system, seen from its moon

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Iota Draconis planet

Iota Draconis planet

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Young extrasolar gas giant, artwork

Young extrasolar gas giant, artwork
Young extrasolar gas giant. Artwork of a gas giant planet (right), two of its moons (lower left), and its parent star (upper left) in a 10 million years old star system

Background imageGas Giant Collection: Planets in the Orion nebula

Planets in the Orion nebula
Young planets in the Orion nebula, artwork. The brightest part of the Orion nebula (M42) is at upper left. A large gas giant planet is seen in the sky from one of its moons



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"Exploring the Majestic Gas Giants: A Journey through our Solar System's Enigmatic Giants" Step into the mesmerizing world of gas giants, as we embark on a celestial adventure through our captivating Solar System. Through breathtaking artwork and scientific discoveries, let us unravel the mysteries surrounding these colossal planets. In the vast expanse of space, our Solar System boasts an array of fascinating planets. Among them are the gas giants - behemoths composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. These immense worlds include Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. When it comes to size comparison in our planetary neighborhood, these gas giants truly dwarf their terrestrial counterparts. Imagine fitting over 1, 300 Earths inside Jupiter alone. Such mind-boggling proportions highlight their dominance within the cosmic ballet. Neptune stands out with its vibrant blue hue reminiscent of an artist's brushstroke against a dark canvas. Voyager 2 captured this stunning image during its flyby in 1989 – revealing swirling storms and atmospheric dynamics that continue to intrigue scientists today. Jupiter reigns supreme as the largest planet in our Solar System. From Europa's icy surface (as depicted by artists), one can only imagine gazing up at this colossal giant dominating the sky above – a sight both awe-inspiring and humbling. Witnessing Jupiter accompanied by its entourage of moons is nothing short of spectacular. As they orbit around their parent planet, these natural satellites cast ethereal shadows upon Jupiter's cloud tops – creating an otherworldly dance between light and darkness across its majestic atmosphere. Io, one of Jupiter's moons captured by Cassini spacecraft in a mesmerizing image showcases volcanic activity on its surface – reminding us that even within such massive worlds lie hidden wonders waiting to be discovered. Delving deeper into understanding gas giants' internal structures reveals intriguing secrets about their composition and behavior. Scientists have unraveled complex layers beneath their atmospheres where unimaginable pressures transform gases into exotic forms, creating a unique environment unlike anything on Earth.