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Jupiter

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Title: Jupiter


1
Jupiter Planetary Verbal Notes
2
Facts about Jupiter
  • Jupiter is the 5th planet from the sun and the
    largest planet in the solar system!
  • Visible by the naked eye for 6 months out of the
    year.
  • Jupiters atmosphere is a literal seething
    cauldron of activity!

3
The Belts of Jupiter
  • Jupiter is covered in orange, red, brown and
    white belts that run parallel to its equator or
    horizontal.
  • What are these belts thought to be caused by?
    Different underlying currents within the planets
    deep atmosphere
  • They vary in location, color, and form.

4
The Belts of Jupiter
  • When viewed over several days they move and
    change which demonstrates tremendous energy in
    the atmosphere.
  • The equatorial belt is light in color and 12,000
    15,000 miles in width.
  • The zones of Jupiter are light colored belts.

5
Fastest Planet!
  • The rotational period of Jupiter differs all over
    the planet, it is not equal or constant.
  • Why?
  • Because its a ball of gas and not a solid like
    the terrestrial planets and very active.
  • Shortest? At the equator 9 hours, 50 minutes,
    and 30 seconds.
  • Longest? At the areas north and south of the
    equator.

6
Jupiters Rotational period
  • Not equal?!?
  • Average rotation period just under 10 hours on
    average
  • Average Rotation Speed 30,000 mph
  • Comparison Earths Average Rotation Speed
    1000 mph!!!

7
Jupiters Rotational period
  • High speed rotation creates an equatorial bulge
    and flattens out the planet.

Click here to view a Video of Jupiter Rotating
8
Observations of Jupiter
  • How do they make observations?
  • By semi-permanent markings on the belts zones
    within Jupiters atmosphere.

9
Great Red Spot!
  • (GRS) Great Red Spot a HUGE storm that is also
    used as a very reliable marker to observe the
    planets rotation.

10
Great Red Spot!
  • Length 24,000 miles
  • Width 7,800 miles
  • The GRS is approximately three times the diameter
    of the Earth!
  • Constantly spinning like a HUGE Earth-like
    hurricane.

11
Facts about Jupiter
  • Distance from the Sun 467,000,000 miles or 5.2
    AU
  • Planetary Symbol
  • Rotational Period approx. 10 hours
  • Revolutional Period 11.86 Earth years
  • Axis Tilt 3? 5
  • Orbital Plane Tilt 1? 5

12
Facts about Jupiter
  • Namesake King of the Roman Gods
  • As heavyweight champion of the worlds, Jupiter
    accounts for more than two-thirds of all material
    in the Solar System outside the Sun.
  • Gravity two and a half times stronger than our
    own creates intense pressures in the swirling
    gases of its atmosphere.

13
Facts about Jupiter
  • Jupiter is very oblate!
  • It is 6,000 miles longer at the equator than the
    poles given it a flattened or oblate appearance.
  • Diameter 85,680 miles! It would take 11 Earths
    lined up side by side to equal Jupiters diameter
    and 1,330 Earths to fill its volume!
  • Mass wise 318 Earths would be needed to equal the
    mass of Jupiter!

14
Secrets of the Universe!
  • Astronomers believe that Jupiter may hold the key
    to understanding the origin of our solar system.
  • Why?
  • Because astronomers believe it still holds some
    primordial material inside!

15
Composition of Jupiter
  • Most of Jupiters volume is made of hydrogen in
    both a liquid metallic form and a gaseous state.
  • Hydrogen normally exists in a gaseous form,
    however in Jupiters atmosphere, the pressure is
    so great and the atmosphere is so dense near the
    surface that the hydrogen turns into a liquid
    metallic form.

16
Jupiters Interior
  • The liquid metallic hydrogen core takes up most
    of the interior of Jupiter and they believe that
    a small rocky core that lies at the center of the
    outer core.

Outside the core lies 82 hydrogen (liquid
gaseous) 17 helium 1 ammonia (NH3), water
(H2O), methane (CH4)
17
Facts about Jupiter
  • Jupiter is surrounded by two thick cloud decks.
  • Lower Cloud Deck water droplets and ice
    crystals
  • Upper Cloud Deck crystals of frozen ammonia at
    -300?F
  • The deck contains the colorful belts zones.

18
Great Atmospheric Pressure Temperature
  • Estimated at 10,000,000 pounds per square inch
    with temperatures as high as 50,000?F.

19
Great Atmospheric Pressure Temperature
  • As gravity condensed Jupiter, the planet began to
    heat up and give off its own energy.
  • Today it radiates 1.7 times more energy than it
    receives from the Sun!
  • Why?
  • Theory If Jupiter had been 50-85xs its mass it
    would have become a medium-sized star like our
    Sun rather than a planet and the Earth would have
    never existed!

20
Satellites of Jupiter
  • Jupiter has a total of 16 moons.
  • The four largest moons were discovered by Galileo
    in 1610 and are known as the Galilean Satellites
  • They are even visible with the use of binoculars
    or a weak amateur telescope.

21
Satellites of Jupiter
  • Besides the Galilean Satellites, Jupiters other
    12 moons are irregular in shape and resemble
    asteroids that range in size from 4 to 70 miles
    in diameter.
  • These other moons are thought to be captured from
    the asteroid belt.

22
Galilean Satellites
  • 1st Galilean Moon Io
  • The most volcanically active body in the Solar
    System.
  • This is caused by the gravity of Jupiter pulling
    on Io, which creates great friction that melts
    the moons interior.
  • Ios sulfurous volcanoes spew gas into space that
    forms a gaseous sulfur band around Jupiter.
  • There is also a tube of electrical energy that
    connects Io to Jupiter and is more powerful than
    all the electricity on Earth!

23
Galilean Satellites
  • 2nd Galilean Moon Europa
  • Covered with a 60 mile-thick layer of ice.
  • Theory gravitational friction and heating
    create a huge liquid ocean of water under its icy
    crust.

24
Galilean Satellites
  • 3rd Galilean Moon Ganymede
  • The largest of the Galilean Moons it is larger
    than Mercury!
  • Contains two types of crust.
  • One type is very old and heavily cratered.
  • The other is a grooved surface and the craters
    have been covered or changed they arent sure
    why, perhaps the movement of the crust.

25
Galilean Satellites
  • 4th Galilean Moon Callisto
  • The most cratered of the four Galilean
    Satellites.
  • Its icy surface is unchanged since planetesimals
    bombarded it over3.5 billion years ago.

26
Galilean Satellites
27
NASA Missions
  • 1973-1974 Pioneer 10 11
  • Flyby with pictures of cloud tops, moons, polar
    regions.
  • 1979 Voyager 1 2
  • Faint rings, 3 moons, Ios volcanism, and the
    rings of Jupiter.
  • 1989 Launched Galileo which arrived in 1995.
  • Goal 11 orbits in 22 months the dropping of a
    probe into the atmosphere where 6 instruments
    will collect data until it is destroyed by the
    extreme pressures temperatures (pictured here)
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