
So far we have surveyed the general characteristics of four Rock planets (usually called the Terrestrial Planets because of gross similarities to earth). Now we proceed to look at the Gas planets (normally referred to as the Giant Planets - Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune - because all four are (except for the fifth, Pluto, a maverick) very much larger than the inner rock ones. All of these gas balls are made up principally of hydrogen, some helium, and other gases arranged as thick "mantles" with small central cores of rock with possibly some metal. All have distinct atmospheres with circulation driven in part by planet rotation. The internal temperatures are far too small to favor nuclear reactions, so these planets are in no danger of converting to stars. The general characteristics of the Giant Planets are given on this page. The history of their exploration, by the Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft, for Jupiter Galileo, and for Saturn, more recently, Cassini is outlined. There is a brief preview of a special feature of each - the presence of both spherical and irregularly shaped satellites made up of rock and ice, and for several sulphur- or organics-rich surfaces.
Overview of the Outer Planets
Our attention turns now the the four Giant outer planets (plus Pluto, possibly not a legitimate ninth planet) that consist of huge amounts of hydrogen and helium gas surrounding small rock and possibly metal cores. Here is a composite showing a full disc space image of each planet, shown in their relative sizes.

It also helps to place these four and Pluto in their orbits at their relative distances from the Sun, as shown here (the innermost brownish-orange ring is the Earth's position).

The first trips to the outer planets were the Pioneer 10 and 11 missions, launched
in March 1972, and April 1973, respectively. Pioneer 10 went past Jupiter in
December 1973, enroute to becoming the first man-made object to leave the solar
system. (After 25 years of continuing service, communication with this spacecraft
was finally terminated at the end of March, 1997, as Pioneer 10 reached a distance
of more than 11 billion kilometers [6.8 billion miles] from Earth.) Its principal
finding was to measure a magnetic field about 2,000 times stronger than Earth's
and to detect intense radiation belts and a Jovian ionosphere. It sent back
excellent close-up, black and white images of the planet's surface from its
TV camera. Here is one of the classic (historic) images, taken through a blue
filter on the Photopolarimeter lens, showing a full face view of Jupiter, with
its conspicuous dark ellipse known as the Great Red Spot (an atmospheric cyclone).
The small black spot to the right is the shadow cast by one of Jupiter's moons,
Io. At the time, Pioneer 10 was about 2,500,000 km on the Earth side of the
planet.

Pioneer 11 passed Jupiter in December 1974, enroute to a flyby of Saturn in September of 1979. This spacecraft traversed Saturn's rings without being destroyed (as some predicted) by their widely-spaced particles. Pioneer 11 also found evidence that Jupiter's magnetosphere extends beyond Saturn's orbit in the direction away from the Sun.
We come now to what is indisputably the most outstanding planetary space missions ever sent forth by mankind: the Voyager 1 and 2 probes to the outer planets. At a cost of under one billion dollars - a true bargain even then; two remarkable spacecraft visited all of the giant planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. They started their grand tours in 1977 and are still going strong, as these vehicles leave the solar system. They imaged all four planets and 48 satellites, some of which they discovered. A general summary of the Voyager missions is offered on the Jet Propulsion Lab's (JPL) (Voyager Home Page), and its links. It will lead to a 15 minute video on the Voyager missions. Or you can access this summary by clicking on Voyager videos, that gets you to the Multimedia menu, and select "Voyager: The Grand Tour" by clicking on its blue background logo.
One impetus for the missions was the favorable alignment of the giant planets that occurs once every 175 years, such that initial trajectories plus corrections might allow at least one spacecraft to fly past Jupiter, all the way to Neptune. With each planetary flyby, the spacecraft received a gravitational "kick" to speed them along, so as to favorably alter their courses and shorten their travel time significantly (without this boost, the trip to Neptune, using the initial launch velocities, would have taken 30 years).
Voyager 2 launched from Earth on
August 20, 1977, and arrived at Jupiter on July 9, 1979. Voyager 1 took off
on September 5, 1977, reaching Jupiter on March 5, 1979. Even though leaving
later, Voyager 1s shorter path reduced its trip time. Both spacecraft
then went by Saturn, Voyager 1 during November 1980 and Voyager 2 in August,
1981, receiving another gravity boost. At their Saturn encounters, the Voyagers
had met the initial requirement of five years of operation, but Voyager 1's
chosen trajectory (past Saturns moon, Titan) did not favor it continuing
to Uranus. So JPL officials allowed it to depart upward (towards celestial north)
out of the ecliptic plane. Voyager 2's "all systems go" status qualified
it, with appropriate course corrections, to head to Uranus, encountering it
on January 24, 1986. Further course adjustments sent it on to Neptune, with
closest approach on August 25, 1989. At each new rendezvous, the spacecraft
performed superbly, providing detailed data on each giant planet. Both spacecraft
have now left the planetary region of the solar system.
This sketch indicates the trajectories each Voyager followed:
An artist's rendition of the identical
Voyager spacecraft, traveling through space, appears below. The scientific payload
appears at its upper left and also on the large boom extending left to right.

The Voyagers carried instruments
designed to support 10 experiments. In addition to TV cameras, others included
UV and IR sensors, and cosmic-ray, plasma and charged particle detectors, and
magnetometers. These are shown in this schematic diagram:
Because of their extreme distance from the Sun, they could not use solar panels
for power, but, instead, they use radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs)
that convert heat from decaying plutonium into electricity. Because of this
wise power choice, both spacecraft, even today, beam radio signals full of new
science data from well beyond 100 A.U. (1 A.U. is the distance from the Sun
to Earth: 150 million kilometers [93,000,000 miles]), having passed the heliopause,
the outermost boundary of measurable solar wind. As an introduction to the superb
images sent back from the Voyagers, consider the next two views, each showing
a segment of its planet, along with two visible moons. At the top is Jupiter,
seen by Voyager 2, on February 3, 1979, from a distance of 20,000,000 km (12,400,000
mi), with its moons in the foreground: Io on the left and Europa to its right.
At the bottom is an image from Voyager 1 that displays part of the saturnian
surface, its magnificent rings (innermost = A, then the Cassini Gap, then B,
the Encke Division, and C and the outer rings), and the moons Dione and Tethys. 19-52: What
are the three dots (glitches?) in the Saturn picture? ANSWER
Galileo was a major mission that went to Jupiter alone, arriving in 1995. It studied both the planet itself and its major moons. We will treat these in detail in the next two pages As a preview, JPL has a webcast from its von Karman Series that looks to the Galileo mission in detail. Access it through the JPL Video Site, then the pathway Subject-->Von Karman Series 2003 --> Format -->Webcast --> Search to bring up the list that includes "Galileo's Odyssey to the Worlds of Jupiter", September 18, 2003. To start it, once found, click on the blue RealVideo link. We will cite another lecture concerned with the Cassini-Huygens mission on the first Saturn page. The giant planets are just that:
vastly larger, near-spherical bodies, dominated by atmospheres that comprise
the bulk of their volumes. Orbiting at 5.2 A.U., Jupiter is the largest, with
an equatorial diameter of 142,984 km (88,850 mi, measured from the center to
an outer level, where we estimate the atmospheric pressure is 1.0 atm.) and
a mass of 1.9 x 1027 kg (4.19 x 1027 lbs) (greater than
twice that of all other planets combined, and 318 times greater than Earths).
Moving further from the sun, the planets are progressively smaller, as follows:
Saturn (9.54 A.U.) - 120,530 km (74,897 mi)(about 90 Earth masses); Uranus (19.22 A.U.) - 51,116 km
(31,763 mi); Neptune (30.1 A.U.) - 49,528 km (30,777 mi). They experience polar
flattening of about 2% to 10%. Each planet rotates very rapidly for its size; for Jupiter and Saturn their rotational periods are about 10 Earth hours; Uranus and Neptune have rotational periods less than one Earth day.
The Giant planets consist mainly
of hydrogen and helium (for Jupiter and Saturn, the ratio of H/He is about 9:1
by number of atoms and 7:3 by atomic weight); minor amounts of methane and ammonia;
and traces of nitrogen and water. Jupiter and Saturn are massive enough to convert
the inner layers of hydrogen into a metallic liquid state. For Jupiter, this
region is about 40,000 km (24,856 mi) thick. It is less than 15,000 km (9,321
mi) thick for Saturn. For both planets, the region grades outward into liquid
molecular hydrogen (Jupiters outer region is about 18,000 km [11,185 mi] thick),
and then comparatively thin atmospheres. Metallic hydrogen is absent in Uranus
and Neptune, so, their interiors are mostly molecular hydrogen. Based on density
calculations, all four planets may have a rocky (silicate) core, subjected
to high pressures and temperatures (Jupiter: about 20,000° K). The radius
of Jupiter's core is about 5% and Saturn's about 10% of the planetary radius.
The cores of Uranus and Neptune extend to about 1/2 their planetary radius.
Reinterpretation of earlier data (to be refined from future Cassini measurements) has cast doubt on any solid core at all on Jupiter. The argument is that the intense pressures in the core region, coupled with higher temperatures, prevented rocky core formation, so that the elements beyond helium are still dispersed in the gas/liquid phases. Thermal energy released from compression
is largely responsible for the internal heat that makes each planet warmer at
the surface (reverse thermal gradient) than expected from solar heating alone.
For Jupiter, heat from the interior provides 70% more thermal energy than received
from the Sun. This energy promotes the fluid dynamics that drive the atmospheres
into intense motions in belts or zones, roughly parallel to their equators,
with wind speeds far in excess of those on Earth. Thermal conditions at great
depth cause electron stripping and other mechanisms involving conductive motions
that produce magnetic fields around each planet. The fields of Jupiter and Saturn
are about 4,000 and 1,000 times, respectively, that of Earths magnetic
field. The fields of Uranus and Neptune are much weaker. However, the magnetospheres
of Uranus and Neptune have unusual shapes and distributions, with the magnetic
pole axis of each strongly inclined to the rotational axis. Uranus's spin axis
tilts 98° , so it almost lies in the solar ecliptic plane. Prior to the Voyagers visits,
we only knew Saturn had rings of material moving in near-circular paths at varying
distances beyond the planet's (gas-pressure-defined) surface. But, as the spacecraft
imaged the three other planets, we found positive visual evidence of generally
more subdued rings at each one, so that we now consider rings the norm for this
type of gaseous body. The rings consist of minute particles of ice and rock.
At Saturn, some are as large as a small house, and concentrate in orbits only
a few kilometers thick. Within the rings, the particles are widely separated.
The origin of such rings is still uncertain, but opinion favors disruption of
earlier satellites. However the rings may have collected debris that eroded
from existing satellites, or that the planet captured from interplanetary space,
or from "leftovers" during the planetary accretion. Each of the outer planets has a number of orbiting moons. Many of these have been discovered by visiting probes such as Voyager and Galileo. Jupiter has 38 confirmed moons (4 being very large); Saturn has 30; Uranus, 24; Neptune, 9; Pluto, 2. The satellites of the giant planets
fall into two principal types: larger ones that adopt spherical shapes, when
their constituent materials are sufficiently liquefied to bring about gravitational
equilibrium, resulting in an equipotential surface. Smaller ones retain irregular
shapes, which suggests that melting has not significantly altered them, or that
they are fragments from collisions that broke their parent body(s) apart. The
planets may have captured some from asteroid-like belts or from passing comets
and other space debris. Most of the satellites consist of mixtures of rock and
ice (water, carbon dioxide, or other frozen gases). Ice is often the dominant
material at the surface. The surfaces of many satellites show varying, often
heavy, cratering that may be preserved states from soon after they formed. Some
satellites have unusual, patchwork-like multityped terrains that suggest they
were reassembled from pieces torn apart from a collision. Indications of later,
partial melting are present in a few. One satellite has an atmosphere; several
may contain liquids at or below their surfaces; and at least one has ongoing
volcanic activity. All in all, the satellites have a lot in common, yet each
retains its own distinctive "character". 


Primary Author: Nicholas
M. Short, Sr. email: nmshort@ptd.net