Gas giant Essays

  • Gas Giants Essay

    1710 Words  | 4 Pages

    Perhaps one of the most interesting features of our fathomless universe are the planets that are classified as gas giants. Huge, turbulent, and distant, the gas giants are some of the most enigmatic features in our Solar System. I have a personal interest to the gas giants and celestial bodies in general. When I was a child, I was fascinated by our Solar System. I read innumerable books about space, and my interests of outer space had been piqued further by other forms of media. Although I held this

  • Life in Outer Space

    2534 Words  | 6 Pages

    Life in Outer Space The answer to the above question is I don't know. This essay is not an essay of answers because nobody knows the answer. What I want to do is speculate. My speculation will be controlled and based on the knowledge we have at present. Like all science, everything I say in this essay could be proved wrong by a new theory or discovery tomorrow. However, the path that we follow will be full of interesting ideas that, I hope, will stimulate the reader. The reason I talk

  • Jupiter and Saturn

    1575 Words  | 4 Pages

    which describes the remaining three planets as Jupiter-like. Unlike the inner terrestrial planets, the Jovian worlds are composed of gas, primarily hydrogen and helium and therefore do not have a solid surface. They are the four largest planets in our solar system if not by mass, then by diameter with Jupiter having the status of being the giant among the giants by acquiring greater than twice the mass of all the other planets in the solar system combined. Just using Earth as a comparison, Jupiter's

  • The Jovian Planets

    2897 Words  | 6 Pages

    planets. They are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Jovian means "Jupiter- like" in which the rest of the jovian planets do coincide with the name. Uranus Neptune and Saturn, all carry the same traits as Jupiter. The jovian planets are large gas giants that contain mainly a thick atmosphere of Hydrogen and helium. These planets do not have solid surfaces, rather they just get denser with depth. They contain high mass and are usually anywhere from 15 to 318 times the mass of earth. They also contain

  • Earth Vs. Giant Flaming Ball of Gas

    932 Words  | 2 Pages

    Earth Vs. Giant Flaming Ball of Gas The world is burning! Or is it? This question has been the topic of arguments for years and has yet to be settled. There are sufficient arguments to both sides of this “dilemma”, but when you look at the facts and our past, only one side will prevail. It becomes clear that global warming does in fact exist, but there is nothing that we, as humans, can do about it. There are many facts proving that global warming exists. According to NASA, average temperatures

  • The Educational Journey

    2172 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Educational Journey Education is a journey through the universe. The universe is enormous and seems to have no end. If a person wants to be truly educated, he or she must spend years in school studying both important and trivial information. The material in the solar system represents the years a student spends in school. The remaining space in the universe is the endless learning one does outside of the classroom. The sun may not be in the center of the universe; however, the sun is the

  • Terrestrial and Jovian Planets

    1317 Words  | 3 Pages

    Terrestrial and Jovian Planets Our solar system contains nine planets, which are broken down into 2 classifications known as terrestrial planets and jovian planets. The terrestrial planets are composed primarily of rock and metal. They also generally have high densities, slow rotation, solid surfaces, no rings, and few satellites. These planets include Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. On the other hand, the jovian planets are composed primarily of hydrogen and helium. They generally have low densities

  • Astronomy

    1944 Words  | 4 Pages

    objects. There are four different types of stars: Protostars, Bright Stars, Red Giants, and White Dwarfs. Protostars are stars that are on the verge of being born. They are glowing clouds of dust and gas. Gravity pulls on every atom moving them towards the center of the cloud of dust, which causes the Protostar to collapse. Over a period of twenty million years the star begins to form and 10 million years after the pocket of gas was formed, a star is born. The second types of stars are called Bright Stars

  • Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel Discovered Uranus and Moons on Gas Giants

    697 Words  | 2 Pages

    Born in Germany as Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel, it wasn’t until his was 30 when he discovered what his true passion was. One night while he was looking at the night sky with his sister Caroline, he discovered Uranus and several of moons around other gas giants. While he was alive, he compiled a catalogue of 2,500 celestial objects that are still being used in today’s society. While in his early life he mainly studied music with his sister. His sister, Caroline was the first women to discover a comet,

  • Women Characters in My Antonia and Giants in the Earth

    1620 Words  | 4 Pages

    Women Characters in My Antonia and Giants in the Earth Many women characters appear in fiction who have been damaged by or disintegrate under the stresses of life. Just as in life, however, many fictional characters survive, adapt, and triumph; these characters may never be recognized within a larger world, but they are vitally important to other characters and are the objects of deep love and respect. Creating this woman in fiction can often be difficult, because the writer must present

  • Tlingit Legend's How Mosquitoes Came To Be

    1287 Words  | 3 Pages

    "How Mosquitoes Came To Be": The Giant Lives On Every time I read the Tlingit Legend, "How Mosquitoes Came To Be," there are certain questions that come to mind about where the legend came from and who wrote it. The legend was first published in 1883 and later found by Richard Erdoes, who included it in one of his publications, American Indian Myths and Legends. Why is the human race so selfish to think we can be the hunter and not the hunted. Although giants could be a dominant presence

  • Essay Comparing The Giant Wistaria and Yellow Wallpaper

    881 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing The Giant Wistaria and The Yellow Wallpaper Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story, "The Giant Wistaria" was first published in June 1891 in The New England Magazine, the same journal that would publish "The Yellow Wallpaper" a year later in 1892. These were difficult years in Gilman's life: she had separated from her first husband, artist Charles Walter Stetson, and was attempting, unsuccessfully, to resolve her contradictory desires, on one hand, to be a good wife and mother in conventional

  • DEEP WOODS

    694 Words  | 2 Pages

    the path. My attention shifts back too my walk and I continue on. The aroma of pine peers into my nostrils and attempts to hypnotize me. Its spell is abruptly broken by the unmistakable sound of flowing water. I get lured to a spot where the tall giants of the forest have parted to make way for a small stream. The reflection caused my the moon’s light causes its surface to emit a queer silver glow which causes the trunks of nearby trees to look like foreboding dark phantoms. Even in this light, I

  • A Utopia in Brobdingnag, Swift's Gulliver's Travels

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    that both Brobdingnagians and Utopians possess is the idea of morality. In Gulliver’s Travels Swift uses the size of the Brobdingnagians comparatively to Gulliver as an indication of their levels of morality. As the Brobdingnagians are large giants their level of morality is high, and compared to these highly moral people Gulliver is merely a midget, a small English man with low moral standards that stem from his upbringing in England. The government contributes to many of these moral problems

  • Rod Marinelli Argumentative Essay

    1612 Words  | 4 Pages

    With the addition of some key pieces, Dallas’ defense could potentially manifest itself into a top unit this year. Coming off a putrid display in ’13 of getting bamboozled on weekly basis (enough to be one of the worst groups ever step foot on a 100-yard field) defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli was able to hold a suspect unit together in ‘14. Of course, we can credit the offense for controlling the tempo (due to a formidable running game) that mitigated the defense from being exposed, but attitude

  • Villains In The Story Of Jack And The Beanstalk

    854 Words  | 2 Pages

    adding another layer to the original tale. So what’s the new layer? Well, readers are lead to assume that the sole villain of “Jack and the Beanstalk” is the Giant; however, one may discover a secret foe after examining the works of Into the Woods and “Jacked.” In the tale of “Jack and the Beanstalk,” the antagonist is not solely the Giant but greed because it is greed that leads the characters to commit horrid acts and causes a false happy ending for Jack and his mother.

  • Historical and Social Symbology in Beowulf

    1490 Words  | 3 Pages

    On the surface, the poem Beowulf seems to be a simple tale of a brave hero who triumphs over three monsters and who engages in several other battles in order to preserve what is just and right. A more thorough reading, however, reveals that the epic poem is filled with events that symbolize historical and social conditions that prevailed during the European reign of the Scandinavians in the seventh century to around the ninth century, following the Danish invasion of England (Sisson 1996). Analysts

  • An Analysis of Gulliver's Travels

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    minor novels. The first is about the Lilliputian's the second about Gulliver visits the giants, the third about the flying island and last about Gullivers travels to the land of Houyhnhmland. In the first book Gulliver gets shipwrecked and ends up on the island Lilliput were some inhabitans of the island finds him and ties him to the ground. The king hears of the news and sends the army to stop the giant from escaping. Gulliver is then taken to the king's castle were he is searched fore weapons

  • Favorite Norse Myths

    3728 Words  | 8 Pages

    melted Niflheim, and from that came two giant creatures. One of them was named Ymir, and he was an evil frost-giant, and the other was a cow named Audumla. Ymir drank Audumla milk to get stronger, and one night, while sleeping, a troll with six heads grew from his feet, and a male and female frost-giant came from his armpit. Audumla also brought something to life, as he licked the salt blocks for food, he recovered another giant. This giant was a good giant, and his name was Buri. His sons and grandsons

  • Jack and the Beanstalk

    567 Words  | 2 Pages

    morning there is a ginormous beanstalks outside there house. Jack is said to have climbed the beanstalk high into the clouds. At the top of the clouds, in some versions, jack reaches a castle. Jack creeps in the castle where he spots a giant. In some stories this giant has a name and ...