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Although Neptune has a mean density slightly less than 30 percent of Earth’s, it is the densest of the

giant planets. This implies that a larger percentage of Neptune’s interior is composed of melted ices and
molten rocky materials than is the case for the other giant planets.

The distribution of these heavier elements and compounds is poorly known. Voyager 2 data suggest that
Neptune is unlikely to have a distinct inner core of molten rocky materials surrounded by an outer core
of melted ices of methane, ammonia, and water. The relatively slow rotation of 16.11 hours measured
by Voyager was about one hour longer than would be expected from such a layered interior model.
Scientists have concluded that the heavier compounds and elements, rather than being centrally
condensed, may be spread almost uniformly throughout the interior. In this respect, as in many others,
Neptune resembles Uranus far more than it does the larger giants Jupiter and Saturn. (For additional
discussion of layered and mixed models as they apply to the Uranian interior, see Uranus: The interior.)

The large fraction of Neptune’s total heat budget derived from the planet’s interior may not necessarily
imply that Neptune is hotter at its centre than Uranus. Multiple stratified layers in the deep Uranian
atmosphere may serve to insulate the interior, trapping within the planet the radiation that more readily
escapes from Neptune. Images of Uranus from Earth as Uranus approaches an equinox and thus as the
Sun begins to illuminate the equatorial regions more directly seem to show an increasingly active
atmosphere. This may imply that discrete atmospheric activity on both Uranus and Neptune is more
dependent on solar radiation than on the relative amounts of heat escaping from the interior.

(Source: britannica.com)

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