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Forthcoming meetings

Speaker Meeting
Date: Friday, June 07, 2013
Time: 19:30
Subject: Strange Weather! Exploring the Giant Planets of our Solar System
Speaker: Dr Leigh Fletcher  (University of Oxford)
Location: United Reformed Church Hall, Newbury
Note: The speaker will be followed by the Society's AGM.
 
Beginners Meeting
No beginners meetings currently scheduled in the diary.
 
Observing Session
No observing sessions currently scheduled in the diary.
 
Special Meeting
Society visit to the national space centre
Date: Saturday, June 08, 2013
Time: 08:30
Location: National Space Centre, Leicester
Note: See the home page for details. Contact Ann Davies for more imformation.
 

 
 


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Planetary information

Click a planet in the list below and the information will be displayed.

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Planetary information for Jupiter

The most massive planet in our solar system, with four planet-sized moons and many smaller moons, Jupiter forms a kind of miniature solar system. Jupiter resembles a star in composition. In fact, if it had been about eighty times more massive, it would have become a star rather than a planet. On January 7, 1610, using his primitive telescope, astronomer Galileo Galilei saw four small 'stars' near Jupiter. He had discovered Jupiter's four largest moons, now called Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. Collectively, these four moons are known today as the Galilean satellites. Galileo would be astonished at what we have learned about Jupiter and its moons in the past 30 years. Io is the most volcanically active body in our solar system. Ganymede is the largest planetary moon and is the only moon in the solar system known to have its own magnetic field. A liquid ocean may lie beneath the frozen crust of Europa. Icy oceans may also lie deep beneath the crusts of Callisto and Ganymede. In 2003 alone, astronomers discovered 23 new moons orbiting the giant planet, giving Jupiter a total moon count of 50 officially named -- the most in the solar system. The numerous small outer moons may be asteroids captured by the giant planet's gravity.

It is named for the king of ancient Roman gods.

 
Discovery: Known by the Ancients
Position from the sun: 5th
Average distance from the Sun: 483,682,810 miles
778,412,020 kilometres
Perihelion:
(Closest point to the sun in orbital path)
460,276,100miles
740,742,600 kilometres
5.04 x Earth by comparison
Aphelion:
(Furthest point from the sun in orbital path)
507,089,500 miles
816,081,400 kilometres
5.37 x Earth by comparison
Equatorial radius of the planet: 44,423 miles
71,492 kilometres
11.21 x Earth by comparison
Plaentary circumference at the equator: 279,118 miles
449,197 kilometres
Volume: 342,000,000,000,000 miles3
1,425,500,000,000,000 kilometres3
1,316.00 x Earth by comparison
Mass of the planet: 1,898,700,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Kilogrammes
317.82 x Earth by comparison
Density of the planet: 1.33 gm3
0.24 x Earth by comparison
Surface area: 24,007,700,000 miles2
62,179,600,000 kilometres2
121.90 x Earth by comparison
Equatorial surface gravity:

68.48 feet/second2
20.87 metres/second2
If you weighed 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 214 pounds on Jupiter

Escape velocity:
(The speed required to achieve orbit)
133,200 miles per hour
214,300 kilometres per hour
5.33 x Earth by comparison
Sidereal Rotation Period:
(Length of Day)
9.925 hours
Sidereal Orbit Period:
(Length of Year)
11.8565 Earth years
Orbital velocity:
(The speed at which Jupiter goes around the Sun)
29,236 miles per hour
47,051.00 kilomtetres per hour
0.44 x Earth by comparison
Orbital Circumference:
(The distance that Jupiter travels to complete one orbit)
2,996,000,000 miles
4,774,000,000 kilometres
5.17 x Earth by comparison
Orbital eccentricity:
(How elliptical is Jupiter's orbit around the Sun)
0.05°
2.90 x Earth by comparison
Orbital inclination:
(How tilted is the orbit of Jupiter from the plane of the solar system)
1.305°
Equatorial inclination:
(How tilted is Jupiter itself from a vertical axis)
3.12°
2.90 x Earth by comparison
Surface temperature: -148°C ( -234°F)
Contents of the Atmosphere: Hydrogen, Helium

 

 

 

Website designed by Paul Thompson.
Graphics based on designs by Adrian West.

The site is maintained by Paul Thompson and members of the Society committee.
The Society is a member of the Federation of Astronomical Societies and a registered charity.

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