Title: Chapter 7: the Jovian planets
1Chapter 7 the Jovian planets
2Comparing the planets
These can be divided into two groups terrestrial
and Jovian The differences are obvious in Mass,
Radius, and Average Density
3Comparing the planets
4Early Solar System Temperatures
Differentiation in the early solar system caused
most of the lighter material to condense out near
Jupiter and Saturn
5Jupiter
Most of what we have learned about the Jovian
planets has come from spacecraft. Voyager I and
II Galileo and probe Cassini and Huygens probe
6Saturn
Cassini is currently in orbit around Saturn and
is continually sending back more data about
Saturn and its moons.
7Gravitational Slingshots are used for missions
to the outer planets, to save energy or to allow
heavier payloads.
8Gravitational Slingshots were very successful
in the Voyager missions to all four Jovians.
9Jupiters Interior
10Jupiters Atmosphere
We know some things about the upper layers of
Jupiters atmosphere from the probe that was
carried by the Galileo spacecraft. It survived
until it was about 150 km below what we call the
surface of Jupiter.
11Galileo probes entry site
12Jupiters atmosphere has very obvious bands
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18Jupiters Convection
Jupiter radiates about twice as much heat as it
absorbs from the Sun. All this energy drives
Jupiters weather System as the heat moves up
from the interior.
19Jupiters Red Spot is a very long-lived storm
We first observed Jupiters Great Red Spot over
300 years ago
20Jupiters Brown Oval, a temporary feature
We have also seen other shorter lived structures
in Jupiters atmosphere, like this Brown oval,
which is really just a large hole in the outer
cloud layers of Jupiters atmosphere. All
jovian planets have differential rotation of
their atmospheres. So the rotation depends on
the latitude.
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22Pioneer 10 Mission studied the magnetic fields
All the Jovian planets have extensive magnetic
fields Jupiters extends well past the orbit
of Saturn!
23Aurorae on Jupiter
Aurorae have been seen on both Jupiter and
Saturn.
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25Discovery 7-1A Cometary Impact
26Shoemaker-Levy 9 Comet Impact
Tidal forces from Jupiter caused this comet to
break up. Then on a later orbit the fragments
hit Jupiter in 1994
27Comet impact simulation using a supercomputer
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29Shoemaker-Levy 9 Comet Fragment G Impact