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Great Balls of Gas: Jupiter and Saturn

Journeying Inside Jupiter and Saturn

  • Telescopic images of Jupiter and Saturn reveal clouds that are composed of ammonia ice, water ice, and a substance known as ammonium hydrosulfide. These trace substances are used to create cloud materials.

  • Similar to the Sun, Jupiter and Saturn primarily consist of hydrogen and helium.

  • The Great Red Spot (GRS) on Jupiter and the other off-white tints in the clouds of the two large planets are mysteries to scientists.

  • Jupiter is 318 times as massive as Earth, while Saturn is about 95 times more massive.

  • Infrared light illuminates Jupiter and Saturn intensely, giving off nearly as much energy as the Sun does.


Gazing at Jupiter

  • Jupiter is sometimes called by scientists “the star that failed.

  • Jupiter's diameter is approximately 88,700 miles or 11 times greater than that of Earth.

  • The gas giant rotates extremely quickly, completing a full rotation in just 9 hours, 55 minutes, and 30 seconds.

  • Belts: Jupiter’s darker bands of clouds.

  • Zones: Jupiter’s lighter bands of clouds.

  • Jupiter appears as a circular disk through a telescope.

  • The North and South Equatorial Belts flank the Equatorial Zone, which runs straight down the middle of the disk.

  • Great Red Spot: A storm in the South Equatorial Belt that at times has been as big as Earth and sometimes bigger.

    • Infrared observations reveal that the atmosphere above the Great Red Spot is significantly warmer than any other place.

  • The magnetosphere of Jupiter is made up of energetic subatomic particles, similar to the magnetosphere of Saturn.

  • Saturn's rings are bright because they are mostly ice, in contrast to Jupiter's dark rings, which are composed of microscopic rock particles.

  • Any object that passes through the Jovian magnetosphere receives a strong radiation dose.

Four Basic Details about the Galilean Moons

  • Callisto

    • Its surface is dark and covered in numerous white craters.

    • The surface is probably dirty ice — a mixture of ice and rock.

    • White craters are the result of large meteoroids, asteroids, and comet impacts that exposed the clean ice beneath.

    • Valhalla: The most noticeable marking; is a huge-ringed impact basin.

  • Europa

    • The surface of this moon is ridged and resembles ice rafts.

    • An underground ocean that is possibly 60 miles deep is covered by a frozen crust that is about 10 miles thick.

    • It is one of only six locations outside of Earth where there is a strong case for subsurface liquid water, according to scientists.

  • Ganymede

    • It is the largest moon in the solar system, measuring 3,270 miles in diameter.

    • Light and dark terrains, possibly ice and rock, are scattered across its splotchy surface.

  • Io

    • There are more than 400 volcanoes scattered across the surface of this moon.

    • It has no visible impact crater because all impact sites have been covered up by lava from the numerous volcanoes.


Setting Saturn

  • Saturn, with a diameter of approximately 75,000 miles, is the second-largest planet in our solar system.

  • Many people believe that Saturn is the most beautiful planet.

  • Cassini Division: A gap in Saturn’s rings.

  • Saturn is even more oblate than Jupiter and spins once every 10 hours, 32 minutes, and 45 seconds. Its poles are also flattened.

  • The rings maintain a fixed orientation, pointing face-on in one direction in space, and are very large but also very thin.

  • As Saturn travels around its own 30-year orbit, the rings are sometimes edge-on and appear to vanish through small telescopes.

  • A large white cloud, also known as a "great white storm," can be seen in Saturn's northern hemisphere about once every 20 to 30 years.

  • The cloud is dispersed by swift winds until it encircles the entire planet in a thick, bright band.

  • Titan: Saturn’s largest moon.

    • The dunes in Titan are aeolian — the wind shapes them or forms them, like Earth’s sand dunes in deserts or at the beach.

  • Cryovolcanism: The eruption of ice-cold material.

Journeying Inside Jupiter and Saturn

  • Telescopic images of Jupiter and Saturn reveal clouds that are composed of ammonia ice, water ice, and a substance known as ammonium hydrosulfide. These trace substances are used to create cloud materials.

  • Similar to the Sun, Jupiter and Saturn primarily consist of hydrogen and helium.

  • The Great Red Spot (GRS) on Jupiter and the other off-white tints in the clouds of the two large planets are mysteries to scientists.

  • Jupiter is 318 times as massive as Earth, while Saturn is about 95 times more massive.

  • Infrared light illuminates Jupiter and Saturn intensely, giving off nearly as much energy as the Sun does.


Gazing at Jupiter

  • Jupiter is sometimes called by scientists “the star that failed.

  • Jupiter's diameter is approximately 88,700 miles or 11 times greater than that of Earth.

  • The gas giant rotates extremely quickly, completing a full rotation in just 9 hours, 55 minutes, and 30 seconds.

  • Belts: Jupiter’s darker bands of clouds.

  • Zones: Jupiter’s lighter bands of clouds.

  • Jupiter appears as a circular disk through a telescope.

  • The North and South Equatorial Belts flank the Equatorial Zone, which runs straight down the middle of the disk.

  • Great Red Spot: A storm in the South Equatorial Belt that at times has been as big as Earth and sometimes bigger.

    • Infrared observations reveal that the atmosphere above the Great Red Spot is significantly warmer than any other place.

  • The magnetosphere of Jupiter is made up of energetic subatomic particles, similar to the magnetosphere of Saturn.

  • Saturn's rings are bright because they are mostly ice, in contrast to Jupiter's dark rings, which are composed of microscopic rock particles.

  • Any object that passes through the Jovian magnetosphere receives a strong radiation dose.

Four Basic Details about the Galilean Moons

  • Callisto

    • Its surface is dark and covered in numerous white craters.

    • The surface is probably dirty ice — a mixture of ice and rock.

    • White craters are the result of large meteoroids, asteroids, and comet impacts that exposed the clean ice beneath.

    • Valhalla: The most noticeable marking; is a huge-ringed impact basin.

  • Europa

    • The surface of this moon is ridged and resembles ice rafts.

    • An underground ocean that is possibly 60 miles deep is covered by a frozen crust that is about 10 miles thick.

    • It is one of only six locations outside of Earth where there is a strong case for subsurface liquid water, according to scientists.

  • Ganymede

    • It is the largest moon in the solar system, measuring 3,270 miles in diameter.

    • Light and dark terrains, possibly ice and rock, are scattered across its splotchy surface.

  • Io

    • There are more than 400 volcanoes scattered across the surface of this moon.

    • It has no visible impact crater because all impact sites have been covered up by lava from the numerous volcanoes.


Setting Saturn

  • Saturn, with a diameter of approximately 75,000 miles, is the second-largest planet in our solar system.

  • Many people believe that Saturn is the most beautiful planet.

  • Cassini Division: A gap in Saturn’s rings.

  • Saturn is even more oblate than Jupiter and spins once every 10 hours, 32 minutes, and 45 seconds. Its poles are also flattened.

  • The rings maintain a fixed orientation, pointing face-on in one direction in space, and are very large but also very thin.

  • As Saturn travels around its own 30-year orbit, the rings are sometimes edge-on and appear to vanish through small telescopes.

  • A large white cloud, also known as a "great white storm," can be seen in Saturn's northern hemisphere about once every 20 to 30 years.

  • The cloud is dispersed by swift winds until it encircles the entire planet in a thick, bright band.

  • Titan: Saturn’s largest moon.

    • The dunes in Titan are aeolian — the wind shapes them or forms them, like Earth’s sand dunes in deserts or at the beach.

  • Cryovolcanism: The eruption of ice-cold material.