Submitted by hackintoshfun t3_10jii88 in space
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Submitted by hackintoshfun t3_10jii88 in space
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We did see Shoemaker-Levy crash into Jupiter (any others?), so there are at least some heavier elements somewhere down there.
Plenty of rocks crash into gas giants. The problem is they don't survive more than a mile or so before being completely broken apart by the extreme winds, temperatures and pressure.
So by the point you get, say, two miles down - there are really no large objects of any type. Instead you get bands, based on the pressure, where elements like to accumulate. But they would be more like a fluid than a solid.
But would not the heavier/denser elements sink to the core eventually ? It might be a molten core or some other, more exotic aggregation state, but still. Certainly not a gas.
That's what I mean is solid core.
I was once lecturing along side a NASA scientist (I'm ex-NASA) and she was explaining the gas giants. Afterwards, I took her aside and said "considering the pressure of gas giants, and all the stuff falling in, doesn't it make sense that there is a solid core, even if tiny?".
She agreed that it does make sense.
However, technologically, we can't probe that deep yet (it's just too big with too many complex layers).
The good thing about science is that it doesn’t care what you believe.
That's true....but I'm fascinated with space.
I believe that mass is made of cheese.
Your turn.
I believe there's a man on the moon dead.
If there is anyone dead on the moon, it would be a woman named Alice.
(You have to be pretty old to get that reference)
One of these days...one of these days..
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KaneHau t1_j5kk6zz wrote
Well, first, gas has mass - and in Jupiters case, it adds up to a lot of mass.
Second, Jupiter has pressure - huge pressure the further down you go - so yes, at some point there will probably be areas of metallic gasses, etc.
Whether there is a solid core or not is still unknown.