• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On

UKHSA explains how to tell if you have Covid-19 or the flu as winter dawns

15 October 2025

Tesco’s £36 version of H&M’s viral sequin party dress is about to fly off shelves

15 October 2025

Sir Alex Ferguson showed true colours after Man Utd’s brutal decision amid huge outcry

15 October 2025

‘Best city in the world’ is seaside spot that’s 25C in October and a £20 flight away

15 October 2025

Steven Spielberg and George Lucas pay tribute to late film poster artist Drew Struzan

15 October 2025

‘I’m a couples therapist and most common reason people cheat isn’t what you think’

15 October 2025

Risk of diabetes and stroke is increased by common morning habit, doctors warn

15 October 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • UKHSA explains how to tell if you have Covid-19 or the flu as winter dawns
  • Tesco’s £36 version of H&M’s viral sequin party dress is about to fly off shelves
  • Sir Alex Ferguson showed true colours after Man Utd’s brutal decision amid huge outcry
  • ‘Best city in the world’ is seaside spot that’s 25C in October and a £20 flight away
  • Steven Spielberg and George Lucas pay tribute to late film poster artist Drew Struzan
  • ‘I’m a couples therapist and most common reason people cheat isn’t what you think’
  • Risk of diabetes and stroke is increased by common morning habit, doctors warn
  • ‘Super’ vegetable that’s easy to ignore can ‘protect against cancer’
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
England TimesEngland Times
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
England TimesEngland Times
Home » Jupiter was once massive enough to hold 2,000 Earths says research
World

Jupiter was once massive enough to hold 2,000 Earths says research

By staff18 July 2025No Comments3 Mins Read

Jupiter, the largest planet in our Solar System, is 11 times wider than Earth, and has a mass 2.5 times greater than all of the rest of the planets combined

Jupiter and moon
Jupiter is the most ancient planet in our system(Image: Naeblys via Getty Images)

Astronomers have made an astonishing discovery that Jupiter, the biggest planet of our solar system, was once so colossal it could have enveloped 2,000 Earths. Jupiter takes the crown as the most ancient planet in our system, having emerged from the cosmic detritus that remained after the Sun’s birth 4.6 billion years ago.

The gas giant’s girth is a staggering 11 times that of Earth, which NASA likens to comparing a grape to a basketball in terms of size. Indeed, Jupiter’s mass is a hefty 2.5 times that of all other planets in the solar system put together.

Yet, fresh research has unveiled that Jupiter’s past form was even more immense than its current state – complete with a far mightier magnetic field. “Our ultimate goal is to understand where we come from, and pinning down the early phases of planet formation is essential to solving the puzzle,” explained Caltech’s planetary science professor Konstantin Batygin.

Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, with two of its satellites, Io on the left (above Jupiter's Great Red Spot) and Europa on the right, March 1979.
Jupiter ranks second in the Solar System’s moon count(Image: Getty Images)

“This brings us closer to understanding how not only Jupiter but the entire Solar System took shape.” To unravel the mysteries of Jupiter’s growth and subsequent shrinkage, astronomers Batygin and Fred Adams from the University of Michigan studied the planet’s diminutive moons, Amalthea and Thebe, reports the Manchester Evening News.

With a tally of 95 known moons, Jupiter ranks second in the solar system’s moon count. It trails behind Saturn’s impressive collection of 274. Amalthea and Thebe are the tiniest and closest companions among Jupiter’s four major Galilean moons.

Researchers have delved into the orbital dance of Jupiter’s moons to deduce the gas giant’s past enormity, revealing that a mere 3.8 million years after the Solar System’s first solids took shape, Jupiter was already bulking up to 2 to 2.5 times its present mass. They also discovered that back then, its magnetic field was a whopping 50 times more potent than it is now.

READ MORE: Attraction ‘like mythical Egyptian tomb’ resurrected after fears it had been lostREAD MORE: UK’s favourite walk has been named and it features caves, shipwrecks and coves

“It felt remarkable that two relatively minor moons provided such clear evidence of Jupiter’s early state,” Batygin confessed to Space.com. “The real excitement was achieving this result independently of complex accretion models that depend on a series of assumptions.”

Adams marvelled: “It’s astonishing that even after 4.5 billion years, enough clues remain to let us reconstruct Jupiter’s physical state at the dawn of its existence.”

So why has Jupiter been on a slimming trend?

Digitally generated image of our solar system and points beyond.
Jupiter continues to gradually shrink even today(Image: Getty Images)

The study suggests that Jupiter’s once mighty magnetic field yanked in material from its surroundings, beefing up the planet by approximately 1.2 to 2.4 Jupiter masses every million years. But as the cosmic buffet ran out, Jupiter’s own gravitational pull made it contract, thus becoming more compact and spinning up its rotation rate.

Read about the rocket scientist who tried to raise the Antichrist’s mum after falling in with Aleister Crowley, plus an extinct bird is to be brought back, Close Encounters of the Fifth Kind, and much more in our science newsletter.

Jupiter continues to gradually shrink even today. As its surface and core cool down, the core compresses and heats up, causing the planet to slowly bleed energy.

This intriguing research has been detailed in the journal Nature Astronomy.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related News

Disney World alligator horror as boy, 2, mauled to death on family holiday

15 October 2025

Vote on Israel’s Eurovision participation cancelled as nations plan to boycott

15 October 2025

‘Israel-Gaza peace in Middle East – but not yet as the rest of world knows it’

15 October 2025

Majorca in major tourism crackdown with ban on party boats among strict rules

15 October 2025

Contract killer ‘called police herself’ after loving dad murdered with toxic bean stew

15 October 2025

‘I went to a bar to celebrate after work – then I woke up completely blind’

15 October 2025
Latest News

Tesco’s £36 version of H&M’s viral sequin party dress is about to fly off shelves

15 October 2025

Sir Alex Ferguson showed true colours after Man Utd’s brutal decision amid huge outcry

15 October 2025

‘Best city in the world’ is seaside spot that’s 25C in October and a £20 flight away

15 October 2025

Steven Spielberg and George Lucas pay tribute to late film poster artist Drew Struzan

15 October 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Lifestyle

‘I’m a couples therapist and most common reason people cheat isn’t what you think’

By staff15 October 20250

A couples therapist has answered some commonly-asked questions about relationships, including why people cheat and…

Risk of diabetes and stroke is increased by common morning habit, doctors warn

15 October 2025

‘Super’ vegetable that’s easy to ignore can ‘protect against cancer’

15 October 2025

Lakeland’s heated clothes airer cut my laundry drying time by two thirds and it’s now £40 off

15 October 2025
England Times
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2025 England Times. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version