• 7 months ago
Jupiter is one of our solar system’s most mysterious worlds. But what if you could peel back its swirling clouds? What would you see as you fell through its depths?

Category

📚
Learning
Transcript
00:00Jupiter is one of our solar system's most mysterious worlds, but what if you could peel
00:08back its swirling clouds?
00:10What would you see as you fell through its depths?
00:13Floating through the uppermost atmosphere, the gas giant would begin pulling you in at
00:18a modest 110,000 miles per hour, per Business Insider.
00:22In the freezing ammonia cloud tops, you'd face winds whipping around the planet at over
00:27300 miles per hour.
00:29That's thanks to its brisk 10-hour rotation, says NASA.
00:33Deeper down, you'd sink through thick plumes of sulfur and phosphorus-rich gases.
00:38After about 400 miles, you'd be experiencing pressures nearly a thousand times what you're
00:42used to on Earth.
00:44About 2,500 miles down, get ready for some heat.
00:47We're talking 6,100 degrees Fahrenheit, which is hot enough to melt tungsten.
00:5313,000 miles down would bring you to the innermost layer, where the temperature is hotter than
00:58the surface of the sun.
01:00You'd be falling through the largest ocean in the solar system, says NASA, made of liquid
01:05hydrogen as dense as solid rock.
01:07The pressure would be so intense that the hydrogen might be compressed to an electrically
01:13conducting metallic form.
01:15This buoyant metallic hydrogen would counteract the pull of gravity, keeping you in place.
01:20If you somehow managed to reach the planet's center, you'd have fallen 44,000 miles, or
01:25five and a half Earths stacked on top of each other.

Recommended