Jupiter

From Acw

(Difference between revisions)
(Internal Structure)
(Atmosphere)
Line 11: Line 11:
*''Minor (ppm): Methane (CH4) - 3000 (1000); Ammonia (NH3) - 260 (40); Hydrogen Deuteride (HD) - 28 (10); Ethane (C2H6) - 5.8(1.5);Water (H2O) - 4 (varies with pressure)''
*''Minor (ppm): Methane (CH4) - 3000 (1000); Ammonia (NH3) - 260 (40); Hydrogen Deuteride (HD) - 28 (10); Ethane (C2H6) - 5.8(1.5);Water (H2O) - 4 (varies with pressure)''
*''Aerosols: Ammonia ice, water ice, ammonia hydrosulfide''
*''Aerosols: Ammonia ice, water ice, ammonia hydrosulfide''
 +
 +
Jupiter’s visible atmosphere is dominated by banded structures. The white bands are called zones and the dark bands are known as belts. These bands move due to strong zonal jets (eastward and westward currents in the atmosphere) along their boundaries. The zones are anticyclonic, which means they have an eastward jet on the poleward side and a westward jet on the equatorward side. The belts are cyclonic, which means they rotate the opposite way. The colors of the belts and zones vary with time. The origin of the colors and how they respond to the winds are uncertain. The major cloud constituents, ammonia, H2S, and water, are colorless, but elemental sulfur, phosphorus, and organic compounds could combine in trace amounts to form the muted brown colors that characterise the appearance of the planet.
 +
 +
Weather patterns in Jupiter's atmosphere can last for centuries, largely because the planet has no topography, meaning its atmosphere merges smoothly with the planet’s fluid interior, and also because it has no appreciable equator-to-pole temperature gradient. The most famous weathern pattern on Jupiter is the Great Red Spot (GRS), an anti-cyclonic vortex (high pressure system) 17,000km across and 12500km high.
===Internal Structure===
===Internal Structure===

Revision as of 03:58, 11 October 2007

Jupiter is the 5th and largest planet of the Sol system. It is one of 4 planets in the Sol system that can be classified as 'Gas Giants'.

Contents

Composition

Atmosphere

The planet's atmosphere is composed largely of Hydrogen (almost 90% by volume) with Helium the only other element present at significiant levels.

Atmospheric composition (by volume, uncertainty in parentheses)

  • Major:Molecular hydrogen (H2) - 89.8% (2.0%); Helium (He) - 10.2% (2.0%)
  • Minor (ppm): Methane (CH4) - 3000 (1000); Ammonia (NH3) - 260 (40); Hydrogen Deuteride (HD) - 28 (10); Ethane (C2H6) - 5.8(1.5);Water (H2O) - 4 (varies with pressure)
  • Aerosols: Ammonia ice, water ice, ammonia hydrosulfide

Jupiter’s visible atmosphere is dominated by banded structures. The white bands are called zones and the dark bands are known as belts. These bands move due to strong zonal jets (eastward and westward currents in the atmosphere) along their boundaries. The zones are anticyclonic, which means they have an eastward jet on the poleward side and a westward jet on the equatorward side. The belts are cyclonic, which means they rotate the opposite way. The colors of the belts and zones vary with time. The origin of the colors and how they respond to the winds are uncertain. The major cloud constituents, ammonia, H2S, and water, are colorless, but elemental sulfur, phosphorus, and organic compounds could combine in trace amounts to form the muted brown colors that characterise the appearance of the planet.

Weather patterns in Jupiter's atmosphere can last for centuries, largely because the planet has no topography, meaning its atmosphere merges smoothly with the planet’s fluid interior, and also because it has no appreciable equator-to-pole temperature gradient. The most famous weathern pattern on Jupiter is the Great Red Spot (GRS), an anti-cyclonic vortex (high pressure system) 17,000km across and 12500km high.

Internal Structure

In 2149 UISA scientists launched a probe from their research base on Ganymede to finally determine the nature of the interior structure of Jupiter. Up until that time, its was uncertain whether Jupiter contained any solid matter at all, or was simply a ball of homogenous gas, with density gradually increasing towards the centre of the planet. The probe found that the planet does in fact possess a small solid matter component at its core, composed largely of iron.

The UISA initially delayed the general release of the probe data, hoping they could somehow turn the knowledge to their advantage, perhaps even using it to colonise Jupiter proper. When it became apparent that such as task would be extremely difficult and tremendously exorbitant (one estimate placed the total cost somewhere around 3000 billion dollars), the UISA government abandoned the idea and allowed the scientists involved in the project to publish their data in the journal Science

Despite the UISA government's claims that the project never went ahead, rumours persist that the UISA did actually establish a base at Jupiter's core

Moons of Jupiter

Jupiter has a total of 63 moons but most of these are less than 10km in diameter. Only 4 of Jupiter's moons are large enough to be suitable for human colonisation

This page is about a Planet that exists in the game. It has been added to the wiki, but needs more details.

Personal tools