DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

There’s Something Hiding Under Jupiter’s Clouds, Scientists Find

February 2, 2026
in News
There’s Something Hiding Under Jupiter’s Clouds, Scientists Find

The enormous storms of impenetrable clouds covering Jupiter’s surface make it nearly impossible for us to get a glimpse of what lies below. Any spacecraft attempting to get a closer look would be vaporized, melted, or crushed if it attempted to sail through. NASA’s Galileo spacecraft, for instance, went dark almost immediately when it intentionally plunged into Jupiter’s atmosphere back in 2003.

While Jupiter — a giant ball of swirling gases and liquids — isn’t believed to have a true surface, scientists have been trying to get a better sense of its layers. Now, using data from NASA’s Juno and Galileo missions, a team of scientists at the space agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the University of Chicago have created a highly detailed computational model of Jupiter’s atmosphere.

And as detailed in a new paper, published in The Planetary Science Journal last month, they found something surprising down there: Jupiter appears to contain one-and-a-half times as much oxygen as the Sun — far more than previous estimates, which suggested it was only a third as much oxygen.

The findings also support the prevailing theory that Jupiter formed by accreting icy material billions of years ago near or past the “frost line,” as Space.com points out, meaning the distance from the Sun where temperatures are low enough for ammonia, methane, and water ice to form. (Whether the planet formed in its current orbit or much further away from the Sun before migrating to its current position over billions of years remains a topic of debate.)

Much of the oxygen is tied up in water as well, which changes its behavior drastically depending on temperature, further complicating our efforts to map out Jupiter’s layers.

The researchers’ computational model takes into account both the chemical reactions taking place — from extremely hot metal molecules deep inside the core and much cooler regions in its atmosphere — and the movement of gases, clouds and droplets.

“You need both,” said lead author and UChicago postdoctoral researcher Jeehyun Yang in a statement. “Chemistry is important but doesn’t include water droplets or cloud behavior. Hydrodynamics alone simplifies the chemistry too much. So, it’s important to bring them together.”

Their model suggests that gases move far more slowly through Jupiter’s atmosphere than previously thought.

“Our model suggests the diffusion would have to be 35 to 40 times slower compared to what the standard assumption has been,” Yang explained. “Instead of moving through an atmospheric layer in hours, a single molecule might take several weeks.”

It’s only one small part of a much larger mystery surrounding our solar system’s largest planet — and its more-than-intriguing collection of moons. The angry gas giant of swirling gases continues to baffle even top scientists.

“It really shows how much we still have to learn about planets, even in our own solar system,” Yang said.

More on Jupiter’s moons: NASA Says Europa Is Covered by a Thick Icy Shell

The post There’s Something Hiding Under Jupiter’s Clouds, Scientists Find appeared first on Futurism.

Judy Pace, groundbreaking actor from ‘Peyton Place’ and ‘Brian’s Song,’ dies at 83
News

Judy Pace, groundbreaking actor from ‘Peyton Place’ and ‘Brian’s Song,’ dies at 83

by Los Angeles Times
March 16, 2026

Judy Pace, a pathbreaking model and star of “blaxploitation” films who appeared in television shows through the 1960s and ’70s ...

Read more
News

U.S. defeats Dominican Republic in a thriller to advance to WBC final

March 16, 2026
News

The War Is Making It Harder to Keep the Lights On, 2,000 Miles Away

March 16, 2026
News

CEOs of America’s biggest airlines say $0 TSA paychecks during the government shutdown are ‘simply unacceptable’

March 16, 2026
News

San Diego rager brings swarm of cops after hundreds of kids flood ritzy neighborhood

March 16, 2026
Super long Oscars 2026 had plenty of holier-than-thou lectures, few memorable moments

Super long Oscars 2026 had plenty of holier-than-thou lectures, few memorable moments

March 16, 2026
AEW Revolution: New Women’s Tag Team Champions Crowned

AEW Revolution: New Women’s Tag Team Champions Crowned

March 16, 2026
‘One Battle After Another’ wins best picture at 2026 Oscars

‘One Battle After Another’ wins best picture at 2026 Oscars

March 16, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026