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      • Neptune's environment is not conducive to life as we know it. The temperatures, pressures, and materials that characterize this planet are most likely too extreme, and volatile for organisms to adapt to.
      science.nasa.gov › neptune › facts
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  2. Neptune's environment is not conducive to life as we know it. The temperatures, pressures, and materials that characterize this planet are most likely too extreme, and volatile for organisms to adapt to.

    • Moons of Jupiter
    • Moons of Saturn
    • Moon of Neptune

    The Galileo spacecraft discovered that Europa might be venting t­hin plumes of water 160 kilometers into space. It also found that Jupiter’s magnetic fields induced a current, indicating salty liquid water was present within the sphere. Europa is the solar system’s smoothest object, suggesting its surface is remade by interior processes more freque...

    Tiny Enceladus is the most reflective object in the solar system. Plumes of mist emanating from the outer shell freeze and fall back to the surface, keeping it snowy white. It is smooth like Europa, further evidence that it is geologically active today. Because the mist generates Saturn’s second-outermost band—the E ring—sampling the band is a way ...

    The largest Neptunian moon orbits in a retrograde motion and was most likely captured from the icy Kuiper belt, a distant asteroid ring. The wrenching change in the moon’s trajectory probably heated it up, perhaps enough to warm a global ocean below the crust. Seasonal heating from the sun also warms the moon ever so slightly, even at 4.5 billion k...

  3. As Earth residents, we survive by breathing oxygen which comprises roughly 20% of our atmosphere. Neptune only possesses trace amounts of oxygen within a mix of hydrogen, helium, and methane. For this reason, we would not be able to breathe on Neptune and would have to wear a space suit and oxygen mask for our entire duration on the planet.

  4. Nov 10, 2020 · Nitrogen dominates this moon’s atmosphere, as it does Earths. And Titan is the only other body in the solar system with rain, lakes and rivers – a whole hydrologic cycle in fact. Its flowing lakes and rivers are made of the hydrocarbons, methane and ethane.

  5. By figuring out where Neptune was born and how the planet evolved, scientists learn what conditions in the early solar system were like, around the time life arose on Earth. Neptune has 14 known moons, half of which were likely captured by the planet’s gravity rather than forming in place.

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