More Jupiter Weirdness: Giant Planet May Have Huge, 'Fuzzy' Core

 Jupiter’s deep interior appears to be as strange and otherworldly as the gas giant’s storm-studded exterior, new observations by NASA’s Juno spacecraft suggest.

Scientists have generally thought that Jupiter either harbors a relatively compact core 1 to 10 times as massive as Earth or no core at all, said Juno principal investigator Scott Bolton, who’s based at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.

But neither of these hypotheses fits with the gravity data collected so far by Juno, which has been orbiting Jupiter since July 2016.

“There seems to be a fuzzy core, and it may be much larger than anybody had anticipated,” Bolton said Thursday (May 25) during a NASA press conference announcing the first detailed science results from Juno’s mission.

This core may even be partially dissolved, Bolton said, adding that Juno’s initial observations are also consistent with “some deep motions or zonal winds” occurring far beneath the enormous planet’s cloud tops.

Diagram of Jupiter’s possible interior structure. Observations by NASA’s Jupiter-orbiting Juno spacecraft are already helping to flesh out this picture; Juno’s gravity data suggest, for example, that Jupiter may have a surprisingly large, partially dissolved core, mission team members have said.

Diagram of Jupiter’s possible interior structure. Observations by NASA’s Jupiter-orbiting Juno spacecraft are already helping to flesh out this picture; Juno’s gravity data suggest, for example, that Jupiter may have a surprisingly large, partially dissolved core, mission team members have said.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI

Identifying and characterizing Jupiter’s core is a key goal of Juno’s $1.1 billion mission, which seeks to better understand how the gas giant formed and evolved. Learning about Jupiter’s history should yield insights about planet formation and solar-system evolution in general, mission team members have said.

Juno uses its eight science instruments to study Jupiter’s structure, composition and gravitational and magnetic fields. The probe collects most of its information during close flybys over the gas giant’s poles, which occur once every 53.5 days. (Juno orbits Jupiter on a highly elliptical path.)

This image of Jupiter's south pole was created by a citizen scientist using data from NASA's Juno spacecraft.

This image of Jupiter’s south pole was created by a citizen scientist using data from NASA’s Juno spacecraft.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gabriel Fiset

Juno has completed just five of these data-gathering “perijove” passes to date, so mission scientists still have a lot to learn about Jupiter’s core and other characteristics. But they’ve already been able to determine quite a bit — that Jupiter’s weird, bluish poles are very different from the gas giant’s belted midsection, for example, and that the mechanisms powering auroras on Earth and on Jupiter are not identical.

“The general theme of our discoveries is really how different Jupiter looks from what we expected,” Bolton said.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall  and Google+ . Follow us @Spacedotcom , Facebook  or Google+ . Originally published on Space.com .

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