One of Jupiterâs most recognizable attributes is its sheer size. With a diameter over 88,800 miles, our solar systemâs largest planet is 11 times as wide as Earth and twice as massive as all its sibling planets combined. But according to recent calculations based on some of the gas giantâs tiniest moons, astronomers now believe Jupiter was once more than double its current size, with a magnetic field 50 times as strong. These gargantuan dimensions arenât only impressiveâthey played a major role in shaping our solar system as it exists today. The new findings are detailed in a study published on May 20 in the journal Nature Astronomy.Â
To better understand Jupiterâs primordial stages, researchers turned to the tiniest of the planetâs 92 known moons. Almathea and Thebe respectively circle Jupiter at slightly tilted orbits roughly 112,400 and 138,000 miles above the planetâs cloudtops.Â
By analyzing the dynamics of these orbital discrepancies along with the planetâs conservation of angular momentum, the team could estimate its radius and interior state at about 3.8 million years after the solar system formed its first solids. At that time, the sun was surrounded by a disk of material known as a protoplanetary nebula that was gradually dissipating as it coalesced into the planets we know and love. Based on their calculations, researchers believe early Jupiter was 2 to 2.5 times larger than it is today with a much more powerful magnetic field.
âItâs astonishing that even after 4.5 billion years, enough clues remain to let us reconstruct Jupiterâs physical state at the dawn of its existence,â said Fred Adams, one of the studyâs co-authors and a University of Michigan professor of physics and astronomy.
By focusing on the directly measurable information from Jupiterâs moons and the conservation of its angular momentum, the team was able to sidestep many of the common uncertainties that plague planetary formation models. These often require astronomers to make assumptions about variables like gas opacity, accretion rate, and heavy element core mass.
According to the team, their new calculations enhance more than expertsâ understanding of Jupiter. These factors can be applied to the evolution of other giant planets as they circle stars. They also suggest that gas giants generally form through core accretionâor when a gas rapidly gathers around a core of ice and rock.
âOur ultimate goal is to understand where we come from, and pinning down the early phases of planet formation is essential to solving the puzzle,â said Konstantin Batygin, a Caltech planetary science professor and study co-author. âThis brings us closer to understanding how not only Jupiter but the entire solar system took shape.â