WHY ARE URANUS AND NEPTUNE ICE GIANTS?

          Scientists studying Uranus and Neptune discovered that these planets were very different from Jupiter and Saturn. They are much younger than their bigger neighbours, and therefore unable to feed on the enormous clouds of hydrogen and helium that made Jupiter and Saturn so large. Uranus and Neptune have been called ice giants as opposed to gas giants because beneath their cloud tops they may have oceans of water, heated by the energy from their cores.

          Uranus and Neptune are called ice giants because they are smaller and compositionally different from Jupiter and Saturn, the gas giants. Jupiter and Saturn are composed of mostly hydrogen and helium, with large mantles of metallic hydrogen (which acts like a metal, due to the pressure and temperature within these planets) and only small cores of rock and ice. This is why they are called gas giants: They are mostly gaseous, with very little rock and ice.

          Uranus and Neptune are composed of some hydrogen and helium, but they also contain heavier elements such as oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur. Beneath their relatively thin outer shells of hydrogen and helium, these planets’ mantles are largely made of compressed, slushy water and ammonia. The ice giants’ rocky, icy cores are also proportionally larger than the amount of gas they contain, unlike the gas giants. This is why Uranus and Neptune are called ice giants.

          The “ice giant” terminology took hold in the 1990s when researchers realized Uranus and Neptune were compositionally different from Jupiter and Saturn. Classifying them differently better reflects the variations in the formation of the outer planets, giving astronomers a clearer picture of how our solar system and others formed.