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There are three main categories of [[:Category:Planets|planets]]: [[Terrestrial Planet|Terrestrial planets]], [[Ocean Planet|Ocean Planets]] (water worlds) and [[Gas Giant|Gas Giants]].
+
There are two main categories of '''planets''': [[Terrestrial Planet]]s and [[Gas Giant]]s. Some types of Terrestrial Planets support life or meet the conditions necessary for [[terraforming]]. [[Ships]] equipped with a [[Planetary Approach Suite]] may [[Planetary Landings|land on the surface]] of certain Terrestrial Planets.
   
The term planet refers to celestial bodies orbiting a [[star]] with a [[gravity]] in a specific range. The gravity of a planet has to be strong enough to hold fluids in a stable state (hydrostatic equilibrium) which prevents them from escaping the planet and low enough to prevent nuclear processes to start as in stars.
+
The term planet refers to celestial bodies orbiting a [[star]] with a [[gravity]] in a specific range. The gravity of a planet has to be strong enough to hold fluids in a stable state (hydrostatic equilibrium) which prevents them from escaping the planet, and low enough to prevent nuclear processes to start as in stars.
   
Some astronomical bodies, we call planets, are not considered as planets by this definition. [[Moons]] are natural satellites orbiting a planet and do not fall into the category of planets. However, some natural satellites are considered as planets because they fit their definition.<ref>https://www.universetoday.com/85749/is-the-moon-a-planet/</ref>
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Some astronomical objects that meet the official criteria for planet status yet also happen to orbit a planet are instead classified as natural satellites or [[moons]]. When a moon's orbit expands to the point that the [[barycentre]] of the planet-moon system falls outside the center of the planet, then both bodies would be considered planets and part of a double-planet system.<ref>https://www.universetoday.com/85749/is-the-moon-a-planet/</ref>
   
== [[Terrestrial Planet|Terrestrial Planets]] ==
+
== [[Terrestrial Planet]]s ==
{| class="article-table article-table-selected" border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"
+
{| class="article-table article-table-selected" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="1"
 
|-
 
|-
 
! scope="col"|Image
 
! scope="col"|Image
! scope="col"|Class
+
! scope="col"|Type
! scope="col" |Colour
 
 
! scope="col"|Rarity
 
! scope="col"|Rarity
! scope="col"|In game description
 
 
|-
 
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Icy-180px.png|thumb]]
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Icy-180px.png
+
|Icy Body
</gallery>
 
|Icy Planet
 
|Atmospheric: White.
 
 
Airless:
 
 
Blue, orange, green, yellow, pink (Rare).
 
 
|Very Common
 
|Very Common
|Ice world composed mainly of water ice. Worlds like this will not have much heating in the past, forming in the cooler regions of a star system and have retained many volatiles as solids within their crust.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Ice world composed mainly of water ice. Worlds like this will not have had much heating in the past, forming in the cooler regions of a star system and have retained many volatiles as solids in their crust.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Rocky-Planets-180px.png
 
</gallery>
 
|
 
Rocky Planet
 
|Atmospheric:
 
 
Yellow, black, brown.
 
 
Airless:
 
 
Orange, grey, brown, red, green, black.
 
|Common
 
|Rocky world with little or no surface metal content. Worlds like this have lost most of their volatiles due to past heating, and any metallic content will form a small central core.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Rocky-Planets-180px.png|thumb]]
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
 
|Rocky Body
Rocky_ice.png
 
  +
|Very Common
</gallery>
 
 
|-
|Rocky Ice Planet
 
 
| colspan="2"|''Rocky world with little or no surface metal content. Worlds like this have lost most of their volatiles due to past heating, and any metallic content will form a small central core.''
|White - Grey - Light blue - Light brown 
 
 
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Rocky ice.png|thumb]]
 
|[[Rocky Ice World]]
 
|Uncommon
 
|Uncommon
|Rocky ice world. Typically formed in the cooler regions of star system these worlds have a small metal core and thick rocky mantle with a crust of very deep ice. Geological activity is common in these worlds because of the large quantities of volatiles in the crust, often creating a thin, sometimes seasonal atmosphere.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Typically formed in the cooler regions of a star system these worlds have a small metal core and thick rocky mantle with a crust of very deep ice. Geological activity is common in these worlds because of the large quantities of volatiles in the crust, often creating a thin, sometimes seasonal atmosphere.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
High-Metal-Content-Planets-180px.png
 
</gallery>
 
|High-Metal Content Planet
 
|Atmospheric:
 
Yellow, black, brown.
 
 
Airless:
 
 
Orange, grey, brown, red, green, black.
 
|Common (Rare if orbiting M, L, T, S class stars)
 
|High metal content worlds like this have a large metallic core, with plentiful metallic ores even at the surface. In places, especially around areas of past or current volcanism or liquid erosion, some higher metals can be found in their elemental form too. Mining is therefore very efficient, so these worlds are highly valued.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2"|[[File:High-Metal-Content-Planets-180px.png|thumb]]
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
 
|High-Metal Content World
Metal_rich.png
 
 
|Common
</gallery>
 
|[[Lava Planet]], Metal-Rich Planet
 
|Atmospheric: Black, brown, visible lava.
 
 
Airless:
 
 
Typically deep red/orange due to proximity to star.
 
|Rare
 
|Metal-rich world with a metallic core. Worlds like this can have metallic ores near the surface in places, especially around areas of past volcanism.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''High metal content world with a metallic core. Worlds like this can have metallic ores near the surface in places, especially around areas of past volcanism.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Earthlike.png
 
</gallery>
 
|Earth-like World
 
|Blue with green, brown and white
 
|
 
Extremely Rare (Mainly orbit K, G, F class stars)
 
|Outdoor world with a human-breathable atmosphere and indigenous life. The atmosphere is far from chemical equilibrium as a result.
 
 
|-
 
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Metal rich.png|thumb]]
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
  +
|[[Metal-Rich Body]]
Ammonia-World-180px.png
 
 
|Uncommon
</gallery>
 
 
|-
|[[Ammonia Planet]],
 
 
| colspan="2"|''Metal-rich worlds like this have a large metallic core, with plentiful metallic ores even at the surface. In places, especially around areas of past or current volcanism or liquid erosion, some higher metals can be found in their elemental form too. Mining is therefore very efficient, so these worlds are highly valued.''
Ammonia World
 
 
|-
|Atmospheric:
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Ammonia-World-180px.png|thumb]]
Light brown, brown, beige.
 
 
|[[Ammonia World]]
 
Airless:
 
 
Brown.
 
 
|Very Rare
 
|Very Rare
|Terrestrial ammonia world with an active ammonia-based chemistry and carbon-ammonia based life.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Terrestrial ammonia world with an active ammonia-based chemistry and carbon-ammonia based life.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
 
|-
Nonspherical-Planet.png
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Water.jpg|thumb]]
Non-Spherical-Planet-2.png
 
 
|[[Water World]]
Nonspherical-Moon.png
 
</gallery>
 
|Nonspherical Bodies
 
|Atmospheric:
 
N/A
 
 
Airless:
 
 
Grey.
 
 
|Rare
 
|Rare
|These are planets or moons with a nonspherical shape, with a radius of less than 1 000 KM. It's elongated and can resemble a potato. Typically do not retain any atmosphere.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Terrestrial water world with an active water-based chemistry and carbon-water-based life.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Emerald-Planet-in-Cemiess.png
 
</gallery>
 
|Terraformed World
 
|Blue with green, brown and white
 
|
 
Extremely Rare (Mainly orbit K, G, F class stars)
 
|Outdoor world with a human-breathable atmosphere and indigenous life. The atmosphere is far from chemical equilibrium as a result.
 
|}
 
 
[[Category:Planets]]
 
[[Category:Celestials]]
 
 
== [[Ocean Planet|Ocean Planets]] ==
 
{| class="article-table article-table-selected" border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"
 
 
|-
 
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Earthlike.png|thumb]]
! scope="col" |Image
 
 
|Earth-Like World
! scope="col" |Class
 
  +
|Very Rare
! scope="col" |Colour
 
! scope="col" |Rarity
 
! scope="col" |In game description
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Outdoor world with a human-breathable atmosphere and indigenous life. The atmosphere is far from chemical equilibrium as a result.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
water.jpg|Water world
 
THAILOAE EM-M D7-2 A 6.png|THAILOAE EM-M D7-2 A 6
 
</gallery>
 
|Water World
 
|Atmospheric
 
Blue, often with white (ice).
 
 
Airless:
 
 
Blue.
 
|Rare (Uncommon if orbiting K, G, F class stars)
 
|Terrestrial water world with an active water-based chemistry and carbon-water-based life.
 
 
Water Worlds may occasionally possess a small cluster of islands. This does not alter its classification, however.
 
 
|}
 
|}
   
== [[Gas Giant|Gas Giants]] ==
+
== [[Gas Giant]]s ==
{| class="article-table" border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"
+
{| class="article-table" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="1"
 
!Image
 
!Image
  +
!Type
!Class
 
!Rarity 
+
!Rarity
!In game description
 
 
|-
 
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Gas-Giant-Class-I.png|thumb]]
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Gas-Giant-Class-I.png
+
|Class I
  +
|Common
</gallery>
 
|I
 
|Uncommon
 
|Class I or Jovian gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres. Colouration comes from clouds in the upper atmosphere of ammonia, water vapour, hydrogen sulphide, phosphine and sulphur. The temperature at the top of their upper cloud layers is typically less than 150 K.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Class I or Jovian gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres. Colouration comes from clouds in the upper atmosphere of ammonia, water vapour, hydrogen sulphide, phosphine and sulphur. The temperature at the top of their upper cloud layers is typically less than 150 K.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
 
|-
Class_II.png
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Class II.png|thumb]]
</gallery>
 
|II
+
|Class II
 
|Rare
 
|Rare
|Class II gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres. Water vapour in the upper cloud layers gives them a much higher albedo. Their surface temperature is typically up to or around 250 K.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Class II gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres. Water vapour in the upper cloud layers gives them a much higher albedo. Their surface temperature is typically up to or around 250 K.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
  +
|-
Gas-Giant-Class-III-180px.png
+
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Gas-Giant-Class-III-180px.png|thumb]]
20170221073152_1.jpg
 
  +
|Class III
</gallery>
 
  +
|Common
|III
 
  +
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Class III gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres without distinctive cloud layers. Their surface temperature typically ranges between 350 K and 800 K. They are primarily blue in colour because of optical scattering in the atmosphere - with the chance of wispy cloud layers from sulphides and chlorides.''
  +
|-
 
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Gas-Giant-Class-IV-180px.png|thumb]]
 
|Class IV
 
|Uncommon
 
|Uncommon
|Class III gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres without distinctive cloud layers. Their surface temperature typically ranges between 350 K and 800 K. They are primarily blue in colour because of optical scattering in the atmosphere - with the chance of wispy cloud layers from sulphides and chlorides.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Class IV gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres with carbon monoxide and upper clouds of alkali metals above lower cloud layers of silicates and iron compounds, hence he brighter colours. The temperature of their upper cloud layers is typically above 900 K.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Gas-Giant-Class-IV-180px.png
 
</gallery>
 
|IV
 
|Very Uncommon
 
|Class IV gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres with carbon monoxide and upper clouds of alkali metals above lower cloud layers of silicates and iron compounds, hence he brighter colours. The temperature of their upper cloud layers is typically above 900 K.
 
 
|-
 
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Gas Giant Class V.png|thumb]]
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
Gas Giant Class V.png
+
|Class V
</gallery>
 
|V
 
 
|Very Rare
 
|Very Rare
|Class V gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres, with thick clouds of silicates and iron compounds, even metallic iron.They are the hottest type of gas giants with temperatures at their upper cloud decks above 1400 K, and much hotter in the lower layers, often emitting a dull glow from the internal heat within.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|colspan="2"|''Class V gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres, with thick clouds of silicates and iron compounds, even metallic iron.They are the hottest type of gas giants with temperatures at their upper cloud decks above 1400 K, and much hotter in the lower layers, often emitting a dull glow from the internal heat within.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
  +
|-
Helium-rich_Gas_Giant_2.jpg
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Helium-rich Gas Giant 2.jpg|thumb]]
Helium-rich_Gas_Giant.png
 
</gallery>
 
 
|Helium-rich
 
|Helium-rich
 
|Very Rare
 
|Very Rare
|Helium-rich gas giants have a greatly inflated percentage of helium compared to the hydrogen in their atmosphere. Much of their hydrogen has been lost over time because they have insufficient mass to hold on to it. It may also be because temperatures in their past were much higher, driving off the hydrogen at a greater rate.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Helium-rich gas giants have a greatly inflated percentage of helium compared to the hydrogen in their atmosphere. Much of their hydrogen has been lost over time because they have insufficient mass to hold on to it. It may also be because temperatures in their past were much higher, driving off the hydrogen at a greater rate.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
  +
|-
Gas_giant_with_ammonia_based_life.png
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Helium-rich Gas Giant.png|thumb]]
</gallery>
 
|[[Gas Giant]] with ammonia-based life
+
|Helium Gas Giant
 
|Very Rare
 
|Very Rare
|Gas giant with ammonia-based life. This is primarily a hydrogen and helium-based atmospheric gas giant, but a little below the surface cloud layers,life exists based in the ammonia-cloud layer. The chemistry of this gaseous region is far from equilibrium, with a surprising excess of oxygen and many carbon-based compounds giving it some vivid colours. As with many such gaseous living systems, it is underpinned by vast quantities of free-floating radioplankton - tiny carbon-based algae, each retaining small quantity of liquid ammonia, extracting their energy from the intense radiation flux.
 
 
|-
 
|-
  +
| colspan="2"|''Helium gas giants have primarily a helium atmosphere. They have lost most or all of their hydrogen because they have insufficient mass to hold on to it over time. It may also be because temperatures in their past were much higher, driving off the hydrogen at a greater rate.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="250">
 
  +
|-
Gas_Giant_Water_Based_Life.png
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Gas giant with ammonia based life.png|thumb]]
Water_based_life_gas_giant.png
 
 
|Gas Giant with ammonia-based life
gas_giant_water_based.jpg|Gas giant, water based
 
</gallery>
 
|[[Gas Giant]] with water-based life
 
 
|Very Rare
 
|Very Rare
|Gas giant with water-based life. This is primarily a hydrogen and helium based atmospheric gas giant, but not far below the surface exists life based in the water-cloud layer just below the atmospheric surface. The chemistry of this gaseous region is far from equilibrium, with a surprising excess of oxygen and many carbon-based compounds giving it some vivid colours. As with many such gaseous living systems, it is underpinned by vast quantities of free-floating radioplankton - tiny carbon-based algae, each retaining small quantity of liquid water, extracting their energy from the intense radiation flux.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Gas giant with ammonia-based life. This is primarily a hydrogen and helium-based atmospheric gas giant, but a little below the surface cloud layers,life exists based in the ammonia-cloud layer. The chemistry of this gaseous region is far from equilibrium, with a surprising excess of oxygen and many carbon-based compounds giving it some vivid colours. As with many such gaseous living systems, it is underpinned by vast quantities of free-floating radioplankton - tiny carbon-based algae, each retaining small quantity of liquid ammonia, extracting their energy from the intense radiation flux.''
|<gallery type="slideshow" position="center" widths="277">
 
  +
|-
Water_Giant.png
 
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Water based life gas giant.png|thumb]]
Water Giant 2.png|Water Giant
 
  +
|Gas Giant with water-based life
</gallery>
 
 
|Rare
  +
|-
 
| colspan="2"|''Gas giant with water-based life. This is primarily a hydrogen and helium based atmospheric gas giant, but not far below the surface exists life based in the water-cloud layer just below the atmospheric surface. The chemistry of this gaseous region is far from equilibrium, with a surprising excess of oxygen and many carbon-based compounds giving it some vivid colours. As with many such gaseous living systems, it is underpinned by vast quantities of free-floating radioplankton - tiny carbon-based algae, each retaining small quantity of liquid water, extracting their energy from the intense radiation flux.''
  +
|-
  +
| rowspan="2"|[[File:Water Giant.png|thumb]]
 
|Water Giant
 
|Water Giant
 
|Very Rare
 
|Very Rare
  +
|-
|Water giant. Worlds like this have a large atmosphere made mainly of water vapour. It most likely formed when a large icy body warmed up enough to evaporate a large amount of its surface ice, this would in turn trigger a runaway greenhouse effect leading to a very thick atmosphere made of the evaporated ices.
+
| colspan="2"|''Water giant. Worlds like this have a large atmosphere made mainly of water vapour. It most likely formed when a large icy body warmed up enough to evaporate a large amount of its surface ice, this would in turn trigger a runaway greenhouse effect leading to a very thick atmosphere made of the evaporated ices.''
 
|}
 
|}
   
Line 234: Line 135:
 
File:Elite_Dangerous_1._Planets_d._Rings
 
File:Elite_Dangerous_1._Planets_d._Rings
 
File:Elite_Dangerous_1._Planets_e._Others
 
File:Elite_Dangerous_1._Planets_e._Others
  +
File:Elite_Dangerous_-_Timelapse_-_Planet_Rising_3
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
Line 239: Line 141:
 
<references />
 
<references />
   
  +
[[ru:Планеты]]
 
 
[[Category:Planets]]
 
[[Category:Planets]]
 
[[Category:Celestials]]
 
[[Category:Celestials]]
{{Stub}}
 
 
[[Category:Guides]]
 
[[Category:Guides]]

Revision as of 01:04, 30 June 2020

There are two main categories of planets: Terrestrial Planets and Gas Giants. Some types of Terrestrial Planets support life or meet the conditions necessary for terraforming. Ships equipped with a Planetary Approach Suite may land on the surface of certain Terrestrial Planets.

The term planet refers to celestial bodies orbiting a star with a gravity in a specific range. The gravity of a planet has to be strong enough to hold fluids in a stable state (hydrostatic equilibrium) which prevents them from escaping the planet, and low enough to prevent nuclear processes to start as in stars.

Some astronomical objects that meet the official criteria for planet status yet also happen to orbit a planet are instead classified as natural satellites or moons. When a moon's orbit expands to the point that the barycentre of the planet-moon system falls outside the center of the planet, then both bodies would be considered planets and part of a double-planet system.[1]

Terrestrial Planets

Image Type Rarity
Icy-180px
Icy Body Very Common
Ice world composed mainly of water ice. Worlds like this will not have had much heating in the past, forming in the cooler regions of a star system and have retained many volatiles as solids in their crust.
Rocky-Planets-180px
Rocky Body Very Common
Rocky world with little or no surface metal content. Worlds like this have lost most of their volatiles due to past heating, and any metallic content will form a small central core.
Rocky ice
Rocky Ice World Uncommon
Typically formed in the cooler regions of a star system these worlds have a small metal core and thick rocky mantle with a crust of very deep ice. Geological activity is common in these worlds because of the large quantities of volatiles in the crust, often creating a thin, sometimes seasonal atmosphere.
High-Metal-Content-Planets-180px
High-Metal Content World Common
High metal content world with a metallic core. Worlds like this can have metallic ores near the surface in places, especially around areas of past volcanism.
Metal rich
Metal-Rich Body Uncommon
Metal-rich worlds like this have a large metallic core, with plentiful metallic ores even at the surface. In places, especially around areas of past or current volcanism or liquid erosion, some higher metals can be found in their elemental form too. Mining is therefore very efficient, so these worlds are highly valued.
Ammonia-World-180px
Ammonia World Very Rare
Terrestrial ammonia world with an active ammonia-based chemistry and carbon-ammonia based life.
Water
Water World Rare
Terrestrial water world with an active water-based chemistry and carbon-water-based life.
Earthlike
Earth-Like World Very Rare
Outdoor world with a human-breathable atmosphere and indigenous life. The atmosphere is far from chemical equilibrium as a result.

Gas Giants

Image Type Rarity
Gas-Giant-Class-I
Class I Common
Class I or Jovian gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres. Colouration comes from clouds in the upper atmosphere of ammonia, water vapour, hydrogen sulphide, phosphine and sulphur. The temperature at the top of their upper cloud layers is typically less than 150 K.
Class II
Class II Rare
Class II gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres. Water vapour in the upper cloud layers gives them a much higher albedo. Their surface temperature is typically up to or around 250 K.
Gas-Giant-Class-III-180px
Class III Common
Class III gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres without distinctive cloud layers. Their surface temperature typically ranges between 350 K and 800 K. They are primarily blue in colour because of optical scattering in the atmosphere - with the chance of wispy cloud layers from sulphides and chlorides.
Gas-Giant-Class-IV-180px
Class IV Uncommon
Class IV gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres with carbon monoxide and upper clouds of alkali metals above lower cloud layers of silicates and iron compounds, hence he brighter colours. The temperature of their upper cloud layers is typically above 900 K.
Gas Giant Class V
Class V Very Rare
Class V gas giants have primarily hydrogen and helium atmospheres, with thick clouds of silicates and iron compounds, even metallic iron.They are the hottest type of gas giants with temperatures at their upper cloud decks above 1400 K, and much hotter in the lower layers, often emitting a dull glow from the internal heat within.
Helium-rich Gas Giant 2
Helium-rich Very Rare
Helium-rich gas giants have a greatly inflated percentage of helium compared to the hydrogen in their atmosphere. Much of their hydrogen has been lost over time because they have insufficient mass to hold on to it. It may also be because temperatures in their past were much higher, driving off the hydrogen at a greater rate.
Helium-rich Gas Giant
Helium Gas Giant Very Rare
Helium gas giants have primarily a helium atmosphere. They have lost most or all of their hydrogen because they have insufficient mass to hold on to it over time. It may also be because temperatures in their past were much higher, driving off the hydrogen at a greater rate.
Gas giant with ammonia based life
Gas Giant with ammonia-based life Very Rare
Gas giant with ammonia-based life. This is primarily a hydrogen and helium-based atmospheric gas giant, but a little below the surface cloud layers,life exists based in the ammonia-cloud layer. The chemistry of this gaseous region is far from equilibrium, with a surprising excess of oxygen and many carbon-based compounds giving it some vivid colours. As with many such gaseous living systems, it is underpinned by vast quantities of free-floating radioplankton - tiny carbon-based algae, each retaining small quantity of liquid ammonia, extracting their energy from the intense radiation flux.
Water based life gas giant
Gas Giant with water-based life Rare
Gas giant with water-based life. This is primarily a hydrogen and helium based atmospheric gas giant, but not far below the surface exists life based in the water-cloud layer just below the atmospheric surface. The chemistry of this gaseous region is far from equilibrium, with a surprising excess of oxygen and many carbon-based compounds giving it some vivid colours. As with many such gaseous living systems, it is underpinned by vast quantities of free-floating radioplankton - tiny carbon-based algae, each retaining small quantity of liquid water, extracting their energy from the intense radiation flux.
Water Giant
Water Giant Very Rare
Water giant. Worlds like this have a large atmosphere made mainly of water vapour. It most likely formed when a large icy body warmed up enough to evaporate a large amount of its surface ice, this would in turn trigger a runaway greenhouse effect leading to a very thick atmosphere made of the evaporated ices.

Videos

References