Although they are technically gas giants, Uranus and Neptune are referred to as "ice giants" due to their composition.
Space.com on MSN
Uranus may have more in common with Earth than we thought, 40-year-old Voyager 2 probe data shows
The Voyager 2 mission may have caught Uranus at a special time during which the ice giant's radiation belts were being ...
New research suggests Uranus and Neptune may not be true ice giants, with rocky interiors dominating instead, challenging ...
The cold and remote planets originally earned their label of "ice giants" to contrast their interiors from those of Jupiter ...
Uranus and Neptune may not be the icy worlds we’ve long imagined. A new Swiss-led study uses innovative hybrid modeling to ...
This week, researchers identified signaling pathways underpinning drug resistance in pancreatic cancer, a normally lethal ...
Uranus, the seventh planet in our solar system, is often the butt of jokes due to its name. But did you know that this wasn't always the case? In fact, its original name was even more controversial.
Researchers have uncovered evidence that Uranus and Neptune could be far rockier on the inside than anyone expected.
ZME Science on MSN
Are Uranus and Neptune Really Ice Giants? New Study Says Maybe Not
Fresh simulations show there is a chance Uranus and Neptune might actually be rock-rich worlds wrapped in thinner icy layers.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results