Did you know that Jupiter could hold over 1,200 earth's inside it? That it has 67 moons? Or the fact that “Jupiter” is the name of a Roman god that is in charge of all the other Roman gods? Well you probably don't know as much as you thought you did about Jupiter, all the information you need to know about Jupiter is inside these paragraphs, the red dot, the distance from earth, it's moons, and what a gas planet is. If you've seen a picture of Jupiter you'd know it is very big. If you want to make Jupiter seem really big (which it is), The core is self is 45 times as big as earth. Jupiter is so big that if you combined all the planets except Jupiter, (and the sun of course), Jupiter would still be 21/2 times larger. A radius of Jupiter …show more content…
There are a lot of moon but the four main ones or biggest ones are Io, Callisto, Europa, and Ganymede. Io is very hot and has a lot of volcanos and lava. All of the volcanos cause the surface of Io to be covered in sulfur which is ash from the volcanoes. Jupiter's gravitational pull is so strong that it causes Io’s solid surface to to rise and drop, like a wave, from 300-100 feet at a time! Europa’s surface is the opposite. It has ice and is might be all water. It is even thought to have twice as much water as earth. Europa is thought to actually have life under the ice but no one has ever been there to see. Callisto is very heavily cratered. It is thought to be one of the first of Jupiter's moons. It is just like our moon but bigger. There isn't much of anything out of the ordinary about it. Ganymede is very crazy because it has its own gravitational pull unlike moons. It almost fell for a dwarf planet if it didn't orbit Jupiter. This makes it the largest moon in our solar system. Jupiter is Called a gas planet which means that means that it is made up of many different layers of gas. Some people call it a fake planet or ghost planet. People don't know if the core is solid but if the crust was solid (ground) gravity would be twice as strong. The layer are made of 90% hydrogen and 10% helium.
All in all, Jupiter is a very big planet and has a lot of mysteries to uncover about the red dot, it's moons, and its core. Scientists and astronomers are learning more about Jupiter to this day. Now when you see Jupiter in the sky or in a picture you will know a lot about it, but you are going to need a
Jupiter is the largest and the fastest spinning planet in our solar system. The storm on Jupiter known as the Great Red Spot could swallow up the entire Earth. Jupiter is made primarily of hydrogen and helium and has no solid surface. Its atmosphere resembles that of the sun. Stathopoulus (2000 – 2011), “ Sixteen moons have been identified, with Ganymede noted as the largest - it is bigger than both Mercury and Pluto” (Facts about Jupiter, para. 9).
Jupiter is a gas planet with a possible chance of a core. On the outside of Jupiter, what we can see, is its atmosphere. Jupiter’s atmosphere is layered. It contains hydrogen, helium (a
This may mean there is active cloud formation in those regions, producing fresh white clouds. The clouds in the reddish brown "belts" are deeper, covered by thick smog-like haze. A gas giant is a giant planet composed mainly of hydrogen and helium. The atmosphere of Jupiter is 90 percent hydrogen. The remaining 10 percent is almost completely made up of helium, though there are small traces of other gases inside. The Great Red Spot is a giant, spinning storm in Jupiter's atmosphere. It is like a hurricane on
The outer planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. The inner planets are made of rock, and are solid. These are called terrestrial and are closer to the sun. The outer planets are made of gas, and are not solid. They are much farther from the sun.
Jupiter Research Jupiter is the fifth and largest planet in our solar system. This gas giant has a thick atmosphere, 17 moons, and a dark, barely-visible ring. Its most prominent features are bands across its latitudes and a great red spot, (which is a storm). Jupiter is composed mostly of gas.
The only limit on the size of the moons of a planet is that they must be smaller than the planet. Thus, it is coincidence that Jupiter's and Saturn's large moons are as small as they are: if Jupiter happened to have a moon one-fourth of its own size (as Earth does), that moon would be larger than Earth, Venus, Mars, Mercury and Pluto, and all of these “planets” would have to be classified as asteroids. If Jupiter happened to have a moon half its own size (as Pluto does), that moon would be larger than all of the other planets except Saturn, and we would have a two-planet solar system with seven very large asteroids. The problems with this classification criterion are that they are arbitrary and non-general.
Being a large planet, Uranus' mass is the equivalent of 15 Earths and has a radius of 51,118 Kilometers. Uranus also has 13 rings made up of a frozen waterline material and dust. The planet’s rings are darker than Saturn's rings and have larger rocks within them. They are about 38,000 Kilometers away from the planet's core. The rings are tilted as well.
Jupiter, being the fifth and largest planet from the sun, is huge. In fact, it is approximately a thousand times the size of our home planet. Alongside Neptune, Saturn and Uranus, it is a gas giant. hydrogen and helium are the main components. Jupiter's surface appears striped due to the color swirls. wind on the planet gets up twice as strong as a hurricane on earth.
Jupiter: Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun and is also the largest. It has 67 known moons and one One orbit of the Sun takes Jupiter 11.86 Earth years
Jupiter or Jove, was the Roman god of thunder and the sky. He was the chief Roman god, and along with his brothers, Neptune and Pluto, he ruled the Earth. Each of the brothers was tasked with a domain to take charge of. Jupiter was in control of the sky, meanwhile, Neptune presided over the realm of the sea. Finally, the underworld was granted to Pluto. Jupiter originated from the Greek god, Zeus, and had identical powers.
Jupiter is a giant gas planet in our solar system. Jupiter is 1300 times the size of Earth. Jupiter weights 317.83 times the mass of Earth. (Chown, M.C 2011 Solar System, Touch Press 115-137). Jupiter is only 1.33 times dense than water. Jupiter has a giant red hurricane on its surface which has been active for over 200 years and in more than twice the size of Earth. (Chown, M.C 2011 Solar System, Touch Press 115-137). Jupiter is named after the king of roman god who is also the god of justice. It is a fitting name for the biggest object other than the sun in the solar system. Jupiter’s atmosphere is 96% hydrogen, 3% helium, 0.4% methane, 0.01% ammonia, 0.01% hydrogen Deuteride and 0.0007% ethane. (Chown, M.C 2011 Solar System, Touch Press
Saturn is one of the most interesting planets in the solar system. It is the sixth planet in the solar system, and is most famous for its stunning array of rings. It is a very easy planet to pick out in the sky because it is one of the brightest lights in the shy. It also has a very faint greenish color that makes it stand out from the rest of the objects in the sky (“Astronomy for Kids”). Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system, Jupiter being the only planet that is bigger. It also has at least eighteen moons, more than any other planet in the solar system. There have been three voyages to this extraordinary planet, and one is still in process today. The Pioneer II traveled to Saturn in September of 1979,
Uncovering the mysteries of Jupiter is a crucial step for a greater understanding of our Solar System. Being the massive planet that it is, this mysterious planet may hold many answers to how our the Solar System formed and evolved. The understanding of the origins of the universe includes answers even to the formation of Earth itself. Many believe that the research of Jupiter will lead to discoveries on planet formation and the role of giant planets on the formation f stars and other smaller bodies. Mysteries of Jupiter include its composition, what is under its clouds, what is in its core and its magnetic field. Research on the amount of water in the planet will tell us about the
The knowledge of what the inner core is made up is still and will remain unknown until we can create a satellite that can make into the atmosphere of Jupiter and the other gas planets. Jupiter's atmosphere was also found to be quite turbulent. It is also know that Jupiter spins faster than any other planet. This indicates that Jupiter's winds are driven in large part by its internal heat rather than from solar input as on Earth. The vivid colors seen in Jupiter's clouds are probably the result of subtle chemical reactions of the trace elements in Jupiter's atmosphere, perhaps involving sulfur whose compounds take on a wide variety of colors, but the details are unknown. The colors correlate with the cloud's altitude: blue lowest, followed by browns and whites, with reds highest. Sometimes we see the lower layers through holes in the upper ones. Then we have the Great Red Spot that everyone can identify as Jupiter. This reddish color of the “Great Red Spot” is a puzzle to scientist, but several chemicals, including phosphorus, have been proposed as a reason. In fact, the color and mechanisms driving the appearance of the entire atmosphere are still not well understood. This spot has been seen by Earthly observers for more than 300 years. Robert Hooke discovered it in the 17th century. The GRS is an oval about 12,000 by 25,000 km, big enough to hold two Earths. Another interesting feature about Jupiter is that it
Europa is the sixth of Jupiter's moons and the fourth largest. Europa is named after a Phoenician princess who was abducted by Zeus and taken to the island of Crete to be his lover. Europa was discovered by Galileo Galilei and possibly Simon Marius in 1610 and is one of the four Galilean satellites. The others being: Io, Ganymede, and Callisto. Europa is very different from the other moons of Jupiter. Instead of a rocky, cratered surface like Callisto and Ganymede, it instead has a smooth outer surface of cracked ice. There are very few sign of craters on Europa. In fact, only three large craters have been found. This indicates that Europa's surface is very young and active. In photographs sent back by orbiters, the surface resembles sea ice on Earth. Astronomers believe that beneath this layer of ice may exist an ocean, kept liquid by the moon's internal heat. This liquid ocean could be as much as 30 miles deep. The existence of deep ocean vents on the ocean floor on Earth have led some scientists to speculate that there could be a possibility of life on Europa. Around these deep sea vents on Earth are life forms that do not need sunlight to survive. They instead feed on bacteria that get their nutrients from chemicals seeping up from the ocean floor. This process is known as chemosynthesis. Scientists believe that similar life forms could evolve on Europa if a liquid ocean does indeed exist beneath its frozen surface.