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re: New Photos of Jupiter taken by the Juno Spacecraft

Posted on 3/30/17 at 10:13 am to
Posted by Darth_Vader
A galaxy far, far away
Member since Dec 2011
65107 posts
Posted on 3/30/17 at 10:13 am to
quote:

We should launch something at it's core to see what happens.

I'm assuming nothing can get past the storms and gas clouds though. Aren't there assumptions that has metallic rain and stuff?


That's about the only way we'll ever find out what's down there. The problem though is that on top of storms of Hyper-Biblical proportions, Jupiter gives off enough radiation to fry any electronic instruments that spend too much time within its radiation ring. Basically, unless we can figure out a way to solve the radiation problem, anything we send into Jupiter will be toast long before it reaches the core.
This post was edited on 3/30/17 at 10:15 am
Posted by TheCaterpillar
Member since Jan 2004
76774 posts
Posted on 3/30/17 at 10:18 am to
quote:

That's about the only way we'll ever find out what's down there. The problem though is that on top of storms of Hyper-Biblical proportions, Jupiter gives off enough radiation to fry any electronic instruments that spend too much time within its radiation ring. Basically, unless we can figure out a way to solve the radiation problem, anything we send into Jupiter will be toast long before it reaches the core.



Well, lets launch a something that doesn't require electronics to explode and monitor visually to see what happens when it reaches the surface of the gas. Like a nuclear sized explosion.

Let's frick some shite up
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