Jupiter is the biggest planet in our Solar System, eleven
times bigger in diameter than Earth and two and a half times more massive than
all the other planets put together. Jupiter has no solid surface. Beneath the
gas clouds lies hot, liquid hydrogen, then a layer of hydrogen in a form
similar to liquid metal, and finally a rocky core. Jupiter has a faint ring
around its equator made of microscopic dust particles.
Table 14. ESSENTIAL DATA
| Diameter at equator | 142,984 km (88,849 miles) |
| Average distance from Sun | 778.4 million km (483.7 million miles) |
| Orbital period | 11.87 years |
| Rotation period | 9.93 hours |
| Mass (Earth=1) | 318 |
| Gravity (Earth=1) | 2.36 |
| Cloud-top temperature | -110°C (-166°F) |
| Number of moons | At least 63 |
In 1609, the Italian astronomer Galileo first spied Jupiter’s
four largest moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. The largest Galilean
moon, Ganymede, with a diameter of 5,268 km (3,273 miles), is also the biggest
moon in the Solar System.
Alternate dark and pale bands streak Jupiter’s atmosphere.
The dark bands are called belts and the pale ones are called zones. The
different colours reflect the presence in the atmosphere of different
chemicals, such as sulphur, ammonia, and phosphorus compounds.
There are light displays, called auroras, at Jupiter’s poles,
like the Northern and Southern Lights we see on Earth. But on Jupiter the
displays are much more dramatic. Lightening bolts 10,000 times more powerful
than any seen on Earth also light up the planet.