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Jupiter Is Not What You Think
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- Published on Feb 11, 2026
- The planet Jupiter is not what you think. Almost everyone is wrong about Jupiter because almost everything you were taught in school about this planet is wrong.
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>Gas Giant
>Looks Inside
>Mostly Liquid
liquid can be gas
Fluid giant.
Done.
@LuciaM.Criscuolofluid can be gas, but liquid can’t be gas. There can be a transition state where something exists between liquid and gas, though.
@LuciaM.Criscuolo yes but jupiter is liquid giant. not gas giant
meme arrows and a reddit meme format on my science video?? based?????????
Now I know that you can fit 1000 grapes into a basketball 😂
Surely not
I can fit 1000 grapes in my stomach.
No, you can't because of the unused room because balls don't nest together perfectly. 1000 times bigger doesn't mean that you can fit a thousand in it.
no wonder americans cant get the metric system
That size comparison looks like you can fit about 100 grapes in a basketball
I've worked on JUICE, an ESA space probe currently on its way to Jupiter. I hope it tells us more... several years from now, when it arrives. Probably the most useful thing I've ever done.
Hell yeah 💪🏻
Super cool. Thanks for your contribution to humanity!
That’s dope as shit, my guy! You’ve got quite the story to tell your kids/nieces/nephews and their kids in the future! 🤩
What is JUICE supposed to do?
Where ?! 😊👍
I dont think i can fit 1000 grapes in a basketball
Dont hurt yourself, just keep salting the french fries!
Not wtih that attitude
@sirhcsuiris 😂😂😂
@sirhcsuiris😄
CGPT says yes you can:
Basketball diameter ≈ 24.6 cm → volume ≈ 7,800 cm³
Average grape diameter ≈ 2.2-2.5 cm
volume per grape ≈ 5.6-8.2 cm³
Random packing efficiency ≈ 74% (gaps between grapes)
Calculation (that does not render!)
Grapes ≈ 0.74 × 7,
800 5.6 to 8.2
Grapes≈ 5.6 to 8.2 0.74×7,800
Result ≈ 700 - 1,100 grapes
Best mid estimate: about 900 grapes in a basketball.
I was surprised
As a kid, I always knew jupi had a core. You don't get that big without doing some situps
Why is this not the to comment
@BrosefWtheMosefto? You mean “top”
@sumaiyabegum1161 obviously he meant toe.
Why is
Why top is the comment this
I guess you could say that we haven't even scratched the surface yet
badum tsss
😂
you know nothing jon snow
These science geeks could be like, "oh, see purple? That's uranium....." Like wine tasting, interesting. I still can't burnt oak or a hard core. But I pretend I do
I guess that you could say that im gay
"Let's dive in." Nah ill pass on that bro, help yourself. 😂
It's just a pool man. Join the swim!
@starcraft2own I think I'll pass on that electrifying experience 😅
Wild people still believe in space
@chiquita683lol you don't believe there is space? What are all those stars shining at night, LED's? 😂
Slaps the roof of Jupiter: You can cool so many graphics cards with this bad boy
Jupiter is that older brother that keeps bullying you but beats up your bullies
it's been defending earth for ages, but not sure how it's bullying us?
"No one traumatizes these weirdly hot robots but me!" -Uzi Doorman
who said that only brothers can bully you?
@TinyRat130 True, as they say life can be a heartless bitch with a 13 inch strapon.
@TinyRat130 Is that what you read?
Kudos to the cameraman for visiting jupiter
You need brass ballz to pull that off.
@DawnDupponmihave a cry.. they beat you to it
Envious comments don't make you cool
@devarmont87nah he has a point
@DawnDupponmi YT comments are the last place on Earth for any of those. Lighten up buttercup.
Remember the cameraman NEVER DIES
This is the kind of OG science video I’d watch from 2015-2019. Hell yeah.
GREETINGS GREETINGS FELLOW STARGAZERS
i find this way too limited and simplified. dumbed down. inarticulate. incorrect. and missing proper appreciation for Jupiter. but it's still better than most of the other stuff on youtube nowadays.
@DeuceGenius2we went to Jupiter and got more stupider
@thejohnsweeney well, i guess this is good video for an absolute beginner or a child. but i'm 42 years old and have been fascinated with science since i was young. i wouldl iek to find somethign more advanced that does more justice to how amazing our solar system really is
OG from 2015 hahaha. i love that you're only young but they go much further back, by 2015 youtube was already being swindled by agendas.
the idea of liquid metallic hydrogen and that core pressure is legit nightmare fuel
Probably man
I experienced a sense of mortal dread imagining existing in liquid hydrogen so vast there is no recourse for escape, then they mention how liquid metallic hydrogen is constantly electrified. I mean I'm already dead instantly if i popped into existence within the liquid hydrogen but still. Far as we know it's a giant ball of death
cough
* Black Holes *
cough
@Ricard1807o To be fair that's most things in our solar system
Facts
Jupiter is the bodyguard of earth and the whole solar system devouring any incoming hostile meteors
Thats what scientists USED to say...until we got better computer models which showed us that Jupiter either takes the hit, breaks up the object OR throws it directly at us even faster than it was originally travelling (amongst other direction possibilities!). We are NOT safe. The new models showed us that our solar system is still a place where "shit happens".
I suspect that every incoming meteor could be classified as 'hostile'... 😎
The Lord knows what He’s doing in His Universe! 😊
@charleswilliams8248 - Oh really? What makes you so sure?
@charleswilliams8248 - There is no 'Lord'. Superstition runs rampant.
I had a crazy nightmare as a kid about the Shoemaker Leavy Comet impact. It was on the news whole bunch and some people were worried Jupiter would "catch on fire." (probably some know nothing reporter) Well in my dream it hit and Jupiter exploded and shot out these giant balls that then hit Earth. Everyone was then running from giant Jupiter looking spheres the size of sky scrapers as they smashed up city streets and buildings. One of them caught me and ran me over, and instead of waking up I was squished into a 2D cartoon pancake person.
😆 😂
Lol. Funny how crazy dreams/nightmares from when we were kids stick with us. I had a reocurring dream of the Hulk throwing me out of my house 😅
That's funny, one of the earliest childhood dreams I can remember also involved Jupiter and getting run over. Except I got hit by a train and not a meteor (there was a rail bridge all the way there, you see.)
@an_asp getting run over by the train to jupiter sounds kind of poetic but i don’t know what it means lmao, hubris and/or capitalism or something
Thanks for sharing
We live in one pretty amazing solar system.
One pretty amazing universe, if i do say so myself, one amazing universe
@gabrielneves6602 bro is talking like he created it
@thomashughes8265 nah
Almost like there is a higher being that perfectly created everything…. 😂
@ImJayTeezyNo it isn't you absolute cretin. It's almost like you're a complete regard too dumb to comprehend anything.
I went to Jupiter once it made me stupider
🤣 true brain rot generation. Cred to you!
There's a lot more "we know" in this script than we can honestly claim.
As Mark Twain supposedly said: "There is something fascinating about science: one gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact."
Wisdom there
Thanks for reminding me that a claim submitted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. "So like....there's stuff we don't know." How very profound, would you grace us with some examples that are wrong in the video, perhaps?
@AsmodeusMictian Go deepthroat a philosopher.
I'm not rewatching the video to feed feckless trolls like you.
@AsmodeusMictian The graphic is not to scale. On MY monitor it doesn't look like 1000 earths could fit inside. More like 1000 pencil tips.
The planets in our solar system are Majestic and Mysterious
It's a liquid turd😂
@typerightseesightit’s quite artistic for a turd
@typerightseesightyou are! 😅
@sunnyday_lemonbars😂😂😂
@typerightseesight This is insult is neither here nor there. The reality is that Jupiter is an awesome planet.
Giant super conductor surrounding a metallic core. Sounds kind of like a machine.
No.
What we are looking at is, The Universe in a State of Decay.
Everything has Sin in it. Sin = Lack of Control = Lawlessness.
Other than Earth, nothing in the entire Universe can nurture/sustain life.
Black Holes that tear down and rebuild galaxies, planets etc.....Do so, with all matter having Sin in it and thus, will only rebuild what will end life than sustain life.
When we look at Jupiter, we are seeing The Effects Sin has upon it, as well as everything else in The Universe.
Bad bad Jupiter
Ignoring the spam comments, that sounds really cool!
@ruremerjerpullche2150naughty boy.
@ruremerjerpullche2150I just can’t believe Jupiter be like that.
I always thought it was weird that we seemingly had no entirely liquid planets. We have ocean planets that are rocky planets covered in liquid but we do not have fully liquid planets.
That scratched my brain just right
Turns out, Jupiter is exactly what I thought it was.
nobody likes you
holy shit we have einstein over here
@crimson9273 Not really. It's been suggested to be composed of metallic hydrogen since at least the 1960s. Read a scifi novel sometime. And in that era, "we don't know" and "our best guess is" is square in scifi land. Shoemaker-Levy just confirmed things. Which is important, but the video presents it like it was some unexpected revelation, which it wasn't.
@AzuvectorI think his point was more to celebrate the theory solely comprised by prof Napo
Einstein, after all was a fairly intelligent man
And to compare the two would suggest he has deep admiration for the theories of Dr.Napo
@bcumike well spoken good sir, thank you for defending my honor!
New Giant's Deep lore dropped
Gonna save this for a rainy day
I know it’s coincidental but the fact that Jupiter is named after a god if lightning makes it very fitting
He's god of the Sky and the king. Jupiter is the biggest so he's the king.
Marduk!!!!
The biggest doesn't mean neccesarily better. Jupiter also makes our system unsafe. That's masculine thinking. Bigger doesn't always mean better.
And if it wasn't for Saturn Jupiter would eat everything in its way. Doesn't seem like some wise king but more so one based on aggression.
@mortisvulpis really? Didn’t know that. May I ask why, I’m curious
@mortisvulpisJupiter makes Earth safe. By catching asteroids.
@10:16 Earth's ocean is 200 kilometer's deep? Bruh, the Mariana Trench is only 10.9 kilometers at its deepest at Challenger Deep. Wrong info.
I just noticed that. I'm surprised they didn't catch that.
I saw your comment and decided not to even watch the episode. Unsub. I'm a scientist and do appreciate facts, not junk info.
@themacker894you unsubed due to one error?? That’s a bit extreme.
@themacker894 LOL, it was a mistake. As a content creator I can attest that they happen sometimes, even when you do great research. They usually have all of their facts straight.
@FromNothing this channel makes a lot of mistakes like that. I still watch it to learn interesting things, but don't trust all the details
Appreciate that your narrative does not attempt to dictate results from observations.
Nor does it use AI voices. BIG kudos!
3:53 When you were watching Netflix and suddenly Manager arrives.
Thanks for delivering the history of discovery on this planet. Once we start discussing the possibility of metallic hydrogen, it almost seems silly to continue to think in terms of rock cores…the temperatures and pressure is more about “failed suns” so yah definitely weird because we cannot “experience” a cre but only theorize using our physics knowledge.
Great content once again.
as a science student regretting life choices due to difficulty of syllabus this video and its background music reminded me of when I used to watch this space documentary on TV as a kid and reminded me why opted for science in a first place: endless curiosity and fascination
I dropped out of college as soon as I realized they were teaching nonsense particle theory and Einstein propaganda.
@saltybits9954 “Einstein propaganda” lmao
@ThatBlockyMan
😂 you are a sheep , im sure you dont know!
@ThatBlockyMan Exactly what it is.
11:50 So a super critical gas/liquid state. We see this with gases at high pressure. Gas->Liquid->Super Critical.
Basically where the energy level is high enough that it goes between gas and liquid "at will" and creates a highly energetic state between gas and liquid that could be considered both gas and a liquid at the same time.
Yes on and off at the same time.
God's handiwork
@Luke1ngame It's pretty cool, they kinda do this with steam for power generation. It's called superheated, Holds a tremendous amount of energy to turn massive turbines.
Causes a lot of problems as well due to the high energy state the water/steam will dissolve just about anything and everything including the pipes it's running through. Have to use some pretty interesting materials to handle the high heat and resistance to being dissolved. Any material with a little bit of carbon quickly gets pulled out and creates carbonic acid which will eat through just about anything.
Yes, propane is weird because it is a flammable gas that is stable in a super critical phase. 616psi @ 205degF. With a high self flash point (900+degF). Aka it won't self ignite even when in that high energy state without a secondary ignition source.
Edit: But we don't store it in a super critical state most tanks are under 200psi.
It's called Plasma Einstein.
@saltybits9954 Not plasma, plasma is ionized energetic particles. Typically with elections flowing freely (hence ionization).
This is not ionized only switching between gas and liquid so quickly that it appears to be in both states at the same time. The electrons are not freely flowing they are still locked with their atoms/molecules.
Jupiter casually eating 300 million atom bombs to the face
One question answered about Jupiter always leads to several more questions about Jupiter. He is an enigma.
This object is becoming more dangerous.
"He" sure is, huh?
@loboxx337Yes he. Jupiter, the Roman king of the gods.
He's the guy the planet is named after, so the planet is a he.
Everything in space leads to more questions. 🤣
@loboxx337 Jupiter = Zeus = Dyeuspter (Sky's Father)
What is that beautiful piece of music at 7:17?
Turns out Jupiter is exactly what they taught us in school
Thank you for this explanation! This is such a cool thing to learn about
It's crazy that things like that have been happening for billions of years independently of anything happening anywhere else in the universe. It's all so vast and powerful.
Awesome video as always!!🎉🎉 I miss the weekly videos with space news though, hope they come back 😊😊😊😊
Good video, but every time I see a title like "It's not what you think," or "You didn't know," or "You don't know," I ask myself, "Who in the world knows what I know, or what I think?"
Agreed. It is a bit annoying.
Im mean how else are they supposed to get your attention
God does!
And yet, here you are
@qk5306 To write this!
I have a giant ball of gas right here, just stick your head under this blanket.
Read a scientific paper on this very topic just a few days back..... But my concepts got much clearer today after watching your video.
Thank you so much ❤
Jupiter is indeed a marvel in our skies.
Yogi Berra would call Jupiter one hell of a Catcher's Mit.
Clearly, Jupiter is a hockey goalie.
Your videos are enlightening and always surprising. Keep up the good work. ❤
Sure are, too funny.
Thumbnail looks like someone that ate at taco bell.
Even after this, I believe we don't even know 1% about the planet.
We have been on the wrong path ever since science denied the Aether and replaced the electromagnetic forces with MASS gravity.
There is no such thing as "Nuclear" fusion. It's all Plasma under electromagnetic confinement.
10:15 Huge mistake right there, the deepest point of Earth’s ocean (the Mariana Trench) is only 11 km deep not 200 km
He correctly states ~2000 times deeper than earth’s though
I was sooo confused at that I was like WOATA?!
I immediately caught that as well -
@maxbooth6247...That is ALSO incorrect!
He never said "approximately" either, as you imply.
It would be 22 000km deep on Jupiter if it was indeed "2000 times" the difference. (2000km is a big enough difference to point that out.)
Good 'ol calculator...
I had the same confusion
@stephanehenrie1871 how close do you want him to be? lol If you want exacts then go to class. This is just youtube bro. Its all just theory anyway
The backround music is so soothing, anyone know the name?
I would also like to know
Lux-Inspira - Affection
Lux-Inspira - Affection
this is one of the most amazing videos on youtube, science is amazing when it’s not about numbers
Could anyone tell me what the music is at 17:17 is? It’s so lovely I’d really like it for my sleep playlist. Amazing video. ❤
Lux-Inspira - Affection
Another outstanding presentation! ❤
1:36 would 1000 grapes fit inside a basketball???
Knowledge of which will come in handy when hosting a really odd dinner party.
Talk about synchronicity!
❤ Hi - I really enjoyed the visuals and background music in your video starting at 8:19 (around the big reveal about Jupiter). Could you please share the name of the music track(s) used there (composer / song title)?
Not sure which one is from 8:19, but I recognize the song playing from the beginning to midway through as 'Fathom - Kyle Preston'.
The 2nd song is called: Lux-Inspira - Affection
@jiricerny3459
Thank you people, thank you!🤝
Lux-Inspira - Affection
6:54 “Stranger Things down below” I see what you did there
AI-generated pfp and mistaking a happenstance phrase as a reference to a popular tv show. 🙄 Not surprised.
The background music is very grand yet calming. Would you mind telling what it is called?
It's written higher up under a comment similar to yours.
This music though....you're trying to make me cry while you cosmically blow my mind?
This is not the topic I expected! New Glenn just had a significant extraordinary performance!
Please reveal what music tracks you have used to produce your absolutely stunning and professional video here!!! 🙏🏻🥰
Came to comments section for exactly that info😢
@mbusosibisi2943 Same here!!
Lux-Inspira - Affection
@mbusosibisi2943 Lux-Inspira - Affection
2:02 This is not how gravity works, dude. It doesn't matter whether the chunks are smashed together into a single mass or separated into a fine dust, they all have the same combined mass. The same mass has the same gravity, regardless.
Thank you Spock
8:42 the soundtrack you used was magnificent. Was it your own? Does it have a name?
Lux-Inspira - Affection
Awesome, love you content.
Greetings from Kashmir.
India, Pakistan, or china?
Earths ocean is NOT 200 km deep. The Mariana Trench: -10,994 m. How could you make such a mistake, bro.
20,000 leagues
Great observation, he did say 2000 times greater in the script. Let’s see 20,000/2000=10 and in terms of kilometers challenger deep is 11km… Gtfo the internet if you just gonna hate on somebodies hard work
@CRIDIC
If accuracy in presentation is not important to scientific findings, then what's the point at all?
If part of the findings themselves were off by an order of magnitude, which was just an error someone didn't catch, then they're worthless.
A typo is a typo and I'm sure the video creator would want to know. Why on earth would you rebuke basic proofreading?
@CRIDIC Check out the graphic at 10:18 in the video. It clearly illustrates the point I was making. It's always worth double-checking the data before dismissing a claim.
I expected the guy that always says "it's not what you think" to be voicing this 😂
Something I've always wondered, with giant gas clouds, it's strange that it doesn't just disperse because gas without a container or pressure tends to want to just, disperse. A cloud doesn't have the gravity needed to cause it to collect, but obviously there's a critical point where there is enough gravity to start actually collecting gasses and mass but it's kind of a lot. It's just that initial phase. The fact that so much stuff has collected so often in so many ways is actually very odd and miraculous considering it could have just, dispersed and not pressurized
Gravity is a wild thing
The gas molecules that can escape the local gravity well do, but in doing so, that means the fastest particles have left, effectively "evaporating", leaving the average energy of the gas left behind as lower than it was before. And as the gas cools, it condenses and shrinks.
If you think about it, vs the sun, rocks (metals) will be more influenced by gravitational pull and end up forming the inner rocky planets whereas gasses less influenced, will end up in coalescence balls of gas giants on the outer rings... And of course the occasional rock bombardment would contribute to heavier inner core... Solid core it remains for me!
Imagine in a diffuse state, two molecules of the gas will come closer together and gravitationally interact more seriously, and their center of gravity will be some point in between the two. The general flow of movement is for the gas molecules to infinitesimally drift closer together. Yes there would be wiggling around a bit because the molecules are not at absolute zero. But for a nebulous region of gas there will be a gravitationally influenced gathering-together of all these molecules because of their mutual interactions. And I feel like the whole thing ought to have an observable center of gravity, right?
The way I think of the gas of a nebula is the many "-illions" of atoms all orbiting one another. They are very disperse, only a bit more dense than our solar wind scoured solar system, so they don't collide much. They move in all their random directions and velocities, but the force from the center of gravity slows their escape. If they were fast enough, they leave. if they were too slow, they stay in the cloud. The slowest atoms gather into centers of mass.
I don't believe there's a critical point to start collecting mass in general, but heavier atoms attract together more than lighter ones, and the differences in atoms are in discrete steps, or 'quantized'. Same idea as digital bits. So there are boundaries where heavier atoms have much harder times escaping than lighter ones.
That's part of my theory on solar system formation.
Trump is the biggest gas giant in the solar system.
I thought he was just a orange bag of bull$hit and hot air!
"Almost everything you where taught about this planet in school is wrong"
For those keeping track:
* Jupiter is not the biggest planet in the solar system
* Jupiter is not the 5th planet from the sun.
* Jupiter does not have a giant storm called the Great Red Spot
* Jupiter does not have rings
Wait what.
@innerspearmusic He's pointing out the irony of saying "almost everything".
I think..
@CortlandR The fact that it's the various stages of hydrogen almost entirely, not just a big floating ball of gas, with heavier metals at the core seems incredibly obvious, ... and I have a music degree lol. Hydrogen is a "gas" to us, so it makes sense to call it a "gas planet" even now.
@@Icehowl jupiter exist in your mind!!!?#₹_-+*"':;()/~`|•√π÷×§∆€¥$¢^°={}\%©®™✓[].......
Ju has radiation belts though
Amazing video, made me feel like a small kid again, my curiosity is running wild!
Don't forget that we're all here thanks to Jupiter, otherwise our planet would be very different and likely inhabitable. Jupiter is a G
jupiter is a gay?
This guy knows what he's talking about, he just finished his high-school science project on Jupiter.
And got a bunch wrong too XD
Incredible 😮
Wow, thank you for putting this together. Even as an old man, learning new things still gives me brain tinglies.
I saw the abstract thumbnail and thought Jupiter was a manifestation of the mind flayer
Jupiter’s Stratosphere
How are we be able to learn this much about outer space without being there?
By looking
@poppyfrancis7338By applying scientific methods would be a more appropriate answer I guess
Excellent! Thanks for sharing such brilliant news, particularly during these difficult times. Beautiful work.
Turns out its exactly what i thought it was.
Ah ta yeule
Everything makes Jupiter so cool!
I'm a Saturn man myself
You mean there is no Borg Cube there?
Don’t remind me of that horrible show.
NO!
It's a Monolith 😉
🌌🔭
@sbabcock7476
~~Live Long & Prosper 🖖🏻 👽 🛸 ✨️
🌌🔭
@sbabcock7476 Other that the revel of it being The Borg... AGAIN.
Season 3 was actually pretty good.
@ShanghaimartinHard disagree there my friend. It was a nostalgia-fest & nothing more.
2D villains, the inability to do anything beyond Berman-era species antagonists, absurd stakes YET AGAIN, the lunacy that the UFP would concentrate it’s entire force at Earth for some spectacle (& the fleet was puny & just pathetic), the overwrought death of Roe who was brought back solely for fan service, the shoed-in “Enterprise D” (ditto), the lazy Data & Lore battle because Lore is apparently unkillable, the Death Star Cube they destroy from inside & outrace the shockwave, and on & on.
Absolutely terrible writing. A disgrace they brought them all back just for this crap. That show is easily the worst Trek series ever made by a thousand miles. Every season was bad to terrible. Rios doing multiple personalities & later smoking a cigar were the only redeeming moments.
i have always wondered how can one estimate the weight or relative weight of planets ..
"Almost everything you were taught in school about this planet is wrong"
In school, I was taught that Jupiter is a very large planet. I'm not sure how 'almost all' of that could be wrong.
I love your background music
It’s absolutely beautiful!!! Especially one that starts on 8:17
I wish we could somehow find out what is it!
Gorgeous music!!! ❤
Even the "ask AI" said there's no listing. Pleeeease let us know!
This is Oldschool Runescape music, not sure exactly which Soundtrack but it's one of the most popular ones.
@evgenygalatyuk7118 Lux-Inspira - Affection
@evgenygalatyuk7118 Lux-Inspira - Affection
This was the most informative, eye opening, and jaw dropping video I've ever seen on Jupiter. Amazing!
On this Christmas Day, THANK YOU for the respite😊👍👍🌊🐊
The problem is a common misconception that gravity pulls from the center of the planet. It does not. It pulls from itself in all directions, and this results in the surface appearing to have this center-pulling aspect. But the reality is that the center of gravity for a planet is somewhere between the center and the surface, where gravity is pulling not only down from the surface but also up from the center. And now you know why the core appears fuzzy.
The net effect from the pulling defines the center. Your explanation is irrelevant because it's zero'd out. You have not solved the issue of the fuzzy core. Sorry.
@pogtuber5146 Yes, I did. And not only did I solve it; I did so while I was watching the video. That's how lacking scientific knowledge has become. It's all built upon theories, but some of them are wrong. They just keep building anyway.
The gravitational center of *ANY* object, is a shell between its center and its surface. The *ONLY* net effect you have *EVER* felt is from the surface; but it doesn't zero out anything. The effect of gravity doing that, and *NOT* originating from the center allows for better understanding, and math which allows for the fuzzy core.
It isn't hard to think clearly, just take off the blindfold worn by the scientific community. Once you do that, and allow your thoughts to be limitless once again; you can truly see reality.
You can believe whatever it is you wish. You can believe that no one will know the answer to the fuzzy core, or that someone *ELSE* figured it out. Up to you. I'm just saying that *YOU* telling me I'm wrong, just because you put a few words together, doesn't make me more wrong or more right. It is just *your* words...
No, the centre of the planet's self-grabity gravity is in the core. That's what defines/creates the core.
@kyzer42 Yes, that's what they say. Except convection processes would then be impossible. If you could be near the center, somehow, then the gravity would pull you towards the surface; because only a very small amount of matter is between you and the center, but away from you where all the matter is, that's where the gravity pulls most. It is the accumulated gravity of all atoms pulling and stretching space-time. But it does not make it a single object as far as gravity is impacting all the matter. It is the accumulation of any group of atoms all pulling from everywhere simultaneously. The result is that if you have a sphere of it, and you want to measure the most centralized gravity of the group; then it must appear as a shell between the surface and the center, approximately 1/3 to 2/3, such that the "center" is a shell area roughly 1/3rd from the core.
However, the theory about the core is that the intense pressure of the core being held there is due to the heaviest atoms being at the interior; but that's again from the misunderstanding of the gravitational center. Instead, what happens is that there is a convection field on both sides of the "center". A world within a world basically; and that massive swirling vortexing action from gravity and heat causes the volcanoes and plate tectonics and produces all sorts of wonderful deposits of various minerals, water, and land.
Here's what we know for certain: Science is always presenting new and improved ideas. This statement requires the next one: Therefore, previous understandings were either wrong or incomplete.
So, instead of just agreeing with things, nodding and only listening; think.
For instance, we suppose that we understand where Exo planets which might be earth-like in their atmosphere; and we're doing this from tens of light years away. But when we go to Pluto, a planet/ in our very own solar system, not even a single light day away; we are blown away, had no idea, no clue at all about what we would find. STUNNED!!!!
So, stop always believing this stuff. They are making this stuff up along the way. They don't know. They haven't been there. They are making stuff up! And sometimes, they are very very good guesses; but they are ALWAYS guesses. Okay. Think! Just don't read and nod. THINK!!!!
@TJM-2023You are dumb stop writing bs in comments
No, you are not pulled toward the surface by gravity when you are near the center, planets are a sphere and whatever offset from the center you are you will be pulled toward the center, because theres more total mass in that direction.
If you cannot understand this simple concept, you are hopeless
No way you can fit 1000 grapes in a basketball
Basketball volume = around 7500 cm^3. * 0.64 (random close packing) = 4800 cm^3
4800 cm^3/4.2 cm^3 (average grape volume) = 1143 grapes
its funny that you present this information as fact, when it is nothing but pure speculation.
Kudos to American media and camera man for visiting Jupiter 😂😂.. I didn’t school in 🇺🇸 so I am not caged minded nor ignorant like 80% of American population 😂 this is all a theory from NASA for us to keep in mind. I am not believing shid until I go there myself .
🥰 Soooooo cooooooooool ! Great vídeo!
There were a ton of claims made in this video. Where are your sources? I don't see any in the description
that's intense pressure. you would get a headache like right away
So Jupiter is just the Majin Buu of our solar system. How terrifying 🥶
I was scared when he said 'Lets dive in"
Anyone know any of the songs used in this video?
I would like a key chain next time someone visits
I know that voice - hey aren't you the same guy behind More Lore?
This description of Jupiter makes way more sense than what I learned in astronomy class in college 20 years ago.
Sucking in all that gas...just needs a good fart , maybe Jupiter's waist will reappear..😂
I was born during the shoemaker event.the incident lasted close to a week
Thank you for updating my knowledge.
Jupiter would be a really fitting name for a cat
Why was there explosions from the fragmented comet in the cloud layer?
Sailor Jupiter having electric powers now makes more sense to me