Book Cover
Book
Author Beebe, Reta.

Title Jupiter : the giant planet / Reta Beebe
Published Washington : Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  523.45 Bee/Jtg  AVAILABLE
Description vi, 250 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of color plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Series Smithsonian library of the solar system
Smithsonian library of the solar system.
Contents 1. From Mythology to Robotic Exploration -- 2. Jupiter's Atmosphere -- 3. The Red Spot and Other Cloud Systems -- 4. Jupiter's Interior -- 5. Temperature and Cloud Structure Versus Height -- 6. Spectroscopic Analysis of the Atmosphere
Summary Reviewing the history of discoveries about Jupiter, Beebe shows how our early earthbound knowledge was greatly expanded by the data from the Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft that journeyed past the planet in the 1970s. She also speculates - drawing on the sophisticated models and theorems that underlie all planetary science - on the results of the Galileo Mission (launched in 1989, it is expected to fly by Jupiter in 1995) and discusses the possibly more dramatic July 1994 collision of the Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, hurtling toward Jupiter at 130,000 miles an hour with a mass of nearly six trillion tons
In this book, Reta Beebe provides a full introduction to the jovian system, describing the planet's atmosphere, winds, and the swirling clouds, such as the Great Red Spot, that they create. She discusses models of the interior of the planet, the differences between its satellites (or moons), its equatorial rings of debris, and its magnetosphere: the interactive region around the planet created by its magnetic field. Considered a substellar companion to the sun - because it radiates more heat than it receives from the sun and has a similar chemical composition - Jupiter is thought to have no solid surface below the visible clouds. Among astronomers, it is seen as a laboratory in which to test theories of planet and star formation
Analysis Jupiter (Planet)
Solar system Planets
Notes Series statement from jacket
The t.p. includes the astronomical symbol for Jupiter
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 245-246) and index
SUBJECT Jupiter (Planet) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85071063
LC no. 94002654
ISBN 1560984171 (alk. paper)