Gas giant
A gas giant is a giant planet composed mainly of hydrogen and helium. There are two gas giants in the Solar System, Jupiter and Saturn. The term "gas giant" was originally synonymous with "giant planet". However, starting in the 1970s and continuing into the 1980s, it became increasingly common to classify Uranus and Neptune separately as ice giants, a distinct class of giant planets composed mainly of heavier volatile substances.
Jupiter and Saturn consist mostly of hydrogen and helium, with heavier elements making up between 3 and 13 percent of their mass. They are thought to have a deep atmosphere of molecular hydrogen, with lower layers being more compressed, surrounding a layer of liquid metallic hydrogen, and with a molten rocky core inside. The outermost portions of their hydrogen atmospheres contain many layers of visible clouds that are mostly composed of water and ammonia. The layer of metallic hydrogen located in the mid-interior would make up the bulk of the mass of every gas giant, and it is referred to as "metallic" because under the immense weight of the atmosphere, the very high pressure turns hydrogen into an electrical conductor. The gas giants' cores are thought to consist of heavier elements at such high temperatures and pressures that their properties are not yet completely understood. The placement of the solar system's gas giants can be explained by the grand tack hypothesis.
The line of delineation between very low-mass brown dwarf stars and gas giants is debated. While one definition depends on the manner of formation of the object, the other relies only on the physics of the interior. Part of the debate concerns whether brown dwarfs must by definition have experienced nuclear fusion at some point in their history.
Terminology
The term gas giant was coined in 1952 by the science fiction writer James Blish and was originally used to refer to all giant planets. It is, arguably, something of a misnomer because throughout most of the volume of all giant planets, the pressure is so high that matter is not in gaseous form. Other than solids in the core and the upper layers of the atmosphere, all matter is above the critical point, where there is no distinction between liquids and gases. The term has nevertheless caught on, because planetary scientists typically use "rock", "gas", and "ice" as shorthands for classes of elements and compounds commonly found as planetary constituents, irrespective of what phase the matter may appear in. In the outer Solar System, hydrogen and helium are referred to as "gases"; water, methane, and ammonia as "ices"; and silicates and metals as "rocks". In this terminology, since Uranus and Neptune are primarily composed of ices, not gas, they are more commonly called ice giants and distinct from the gas giants.Classification
Theoretically, gas giants can be divided into five distinct classes according to their modeled physical atmospheric properties, and hence their appearance: ammonia clouds, water clouds, cloudless, alkali-metal clouds, and silicate clouds. Jupiter and Saturn are both class I. Hot Jupiters are class IV or V.Extrasolar
Cold gas giants
A cold hydrogen-rich gas giant more massive than Jupiter but less than about will only be slightly larger in volume than Jupiter. For masses above, gravity will cause the planet to shrink.Kelvin–Helmholtz heating can cause a gas giant to radiate more energy than it receives from its host star.
Gas dwarfs
Although the words "gas" and "giant" are often combined, hydrogen planets need not be as large as the familiar gas giants from the Solar System. However, smaller gas planets and planets closer to their star will lose atmospheric mass more quickly via hydrodynamic escape than larger planets and planets farther out.A gas dwarf could be defined as a planet with a rocky core that has accumulated a thick envelope of hydrogen, helium and other volatiles, having as result a total radius between 1.7 and 3.9 Earth-radii.
The smallest known extrasolar planet that is likely a "gas planet" is Kepler-138d, which has the same mass as Earth but is 60% larger and therefore has a density that indicates a thick gas envelope.
A low-mass gas planet can still have a radius resembling that of a gas giant if it has the right temperature.