Neptune
Object Data
- Catalog Designation
- Neptune
- Type
- Planet
- Constellation
- Solar System
- Magnitude
- 7.8
- Distance
- 4,498,258,374 light-years
- Angular Size
- 2.4
About Neptune
Description
Neptune is the eighth and most distant planet in the solar system, orbiting at 30.1 AU — so far that sunlight takes over 4 hours to reach it. With a diameter of 49,528 km, it is slightly smaller than Uranus but more massive, making it the densest of the giant planets. Neptune is an ice giant with a vivid deep blue color caused by methane absorption, and it hosts the most violent weather in the solar system — wind speeds can reach 2,100 km/h, the fastest of any planet. The Great Dark Spot observed by Voyager 2 in 1989 was an anticyclonic storm the size of Earth, though it has since disappeared and others have formed. Neptune has 16 known moons, dominated by the large captured Kuiper Belt object Triton, and a faint ring system.
Observing Tips
At magnitude 7.8, Neptune is invisible to the naked eye and requires binoculars or a telescope to find. With binoculars, it appears as an unremarkable faint star — you need a good chart or go-to mount to locate it among the background stars. A telescope at 200x or more reveals a tiny disk of about 2.3 arcseconds with a distinctive blue color that helps confirm the identification. No surface detail is visible in amateur telescopes. Neptune's largest moon Triton (magnitude 13.5) is a challenging but achievable target in a 10-inch or larger telescope at high magnification, appearing as a faint point near the planet. Neptune moves very slowly, taking 165 years to orbit the Sun — it only recently completed its first full orbit since its discovery.
History
Neptune is the only planet found by mathematical prediction rather than observation. After Uranus was discovered, its orbit showed unexplained perturbations. In 1845-46, Urbain Le Verrier in France and John Couch Adams in England independently calculated where an unknown planet must be to cause these deviations. Johann Galle at the Berlin Observatory found Neptune on September 23, 1846, within 1 degree of Le Verrier's predicted position — a spectacular triumph of celestial mechanics. Voyager 2 flew past Neptune in August 1989, providing our only close-up look at this distant world and revealing its active atmosphere, rings, and the remarkable moon Triton.
Fun Facts
Neptune's winds blow at over 2,100 km/h — the fastest in the solar system — despite the planet receiving very little solar energy, suggesting a powerful internal heat source. A year on Neptune lasts 165 Earth years; it completed its first full orbit since discovery in 2011. Neptune's moon Triton orbits backwards (retrograde), is slowly spiraling inward, and has active nitrogen geysers — it is almost certainly a captured Kuiper Belt object and will eventually be torn apart by Neptune's gravity in about 3.6 billion years.
Community Photos (1)
Credit: NASA / Voyager 2 / PDS / OPUS / Ardenau4. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)
Skybred Feb 28, 2026
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