483,000,000 |
|||||
Average distance (in miles)
from Jupiter to the Sun. That's 778 million km. |
|||||
6,900,000 |
|||||
Years it would take to get
to Jupiter traveling at a highway speed of 70
mph. Fortunately, spaceships go a lot faster. |
|||||
6 |
|||||
Years it took the Galileo spacecraft
to reach Jupiter. |
|||||
12 |
|||||
Years it takes Jupiter to travel
around our sun. |
|||||
61 |
|||||
Number of moons orbiting Jupiter. |
|||||
1,321 |
|||||
Number of Earths that could
fit inside Jupiter. |
|||||
59 |
|||||
Minutes NASA's Galileo probe
survived before it was crushed by the intense
pressure of Jupiter's atmosphere. |
|||||
3 |
|||||
The number of rings around
Jupiter. |
|||||
WHAT'S IT LIKE ON JUPITER?
This is not a nice place to visit. It is a giant ball
of gas. There is nowhere to land. Any spacecraft - or
person - passing through the colorful clouds gets crushed
and melted. Remember how your head feels squeezed when
you dive into the deep end of a pool? That is pressure.
On Jupiter, the pressure is so strong it squishes gas
into liquid. Jupiter's atmosphere can crush a metal spaceship
like a paper cup.
Scientists think Jupiter's core may be a thick, super hot soup. It might be up to 50,000°F down there.
Jupiter has its own 'mini solar system' of 61 moons. Scientists are most interested in the Galilean satellites - the four largest moons discovered by Galileo Galilei in 1610. Europa, may have an ocean under its frozen surface. Calisto's crater-pocked landscape may be the oldest in the solar system. Ganymede is the solar system's largest moon. It is bigger than Pluto and Mercury. And little Io has more volcanoes than anywhere else in the solar system.
Jupiter also has three rings, but they are very hard to see and not nearly as pretty as Saturn's.
JUPITER CHALLENGE
Find
Jupiter in the night sky. You can see its four largest
moons - the Galilean satellites - with 7x50 binoculars.
The view with binoculars is about what Galileo
Galilei saw when he first used a new thing called
a telescope to study the sky in 1610.
MISSIONS TO JUPITER
Featured Mission: Galileo
In 1995, a probe dropped by the Galileo
spacecraft gave us our first peek inside Jupiter's
clouds. The probe sent back information for about an hour
before it was crushed. It was the first probe to explore
a gas planet.
More Missions to Jupiter:
Past
Missions
Current
Missions
Source:
NASA



