Explore Jupiter
![](/images/icons/jupiter_interior.jpg)
The Giant planets do not have the same layered structure that the terrestrial planets do. Their ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_atmosphere.jpg)
The king of planets is aptly named because it not only has the most dymanic atmospheric motion, ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_magnetosphere.jpg)
Jupiter's magnetosphere is a unique object in the solar system. It is the biggest object in ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_moons.jpg)
The four Galilean satellites; Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, are among the most interesting ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_poles.jpg)
Several interesting phenomena are found at the poles of Jupiter, the largest planet in our ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_facts.jpg)
All of the relevant information about Jupiter collected on one page, including details about size, orbit ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_myth.jpg)
The Roman god Jupiter is associated with the Greek god, Zeus. ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_missions.jpg)
A table containing information about the spacecraft that have visited Jupiter ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_images.jpg)
Access wonderful captioned photos and illustrations that will inspire and excite you. ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/jupiter_links.jpg)
These are links to other great web sites about Jupiter. But beware: you don't want to get ...
Read more
Did you know?
Did you know that
Zephyr was the Greek god of the west wind?
Did you know that the Inuit sea spirit, Sedna, stubbornly refused to marry anyone?
Earth and Space Science Concept of the Day
Do you know what this word or phrase means?
Shadow zonexShadow zone : The shadow zone is the area of the earth from angular distances of 104 to 140 degrees from a given earthquake that does not receive any direct P waves. The shadow zone results from S waves being stopped entirely by the liquid core and P waves being b
Click on the word to find out!
Research Highlights
Geologists have found evidence that sea ice extended to the equator 716.5 million years ago, bringing new precision to a "snowball Earth" event long suspected to have taken place around that time. Funded...
Read more![](/olpa/images/glaciation1_sm.jpg)