someone might, but that person is not me. i hope you feel better before your essay is due...
2006-10-11 18:08:19
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Jupiter by you (ghostwritten by me)
Jupiter is very very very far away from earth. Walking to Jupiter would be difficult, especially without a space suit. Without a space suit you would pop in outer space and your inards would become outards. According to certain scientists the big red spot on Jupiter is actually the symptom a disease that Jupiter caught from Saturn. Jupitar is a gas giant, perhaps from too many burritos. Since Jupiter is so gaseous it may be the next planet lose its planet status. Poor innocent Pluto didn't do anything to deserve losing its status. There are lots and lots of moons near Jupiter, some are kind of wierd. Jupiter's moons are nothing like earth's moon. It would be interesting to imagine earth with as many moons as jupiter, but since earth is so small all those moons would probably just crash into each other. Maybe then earth could have neat rings like Saturn or Uranus. Hehe... I wrote about Uranus! Jupiters most important function is in astrology. If Jupiter is in a certain part of the night sky it totally affects the personality of a baby born at that particular moment. You can look at Jupiter through a telescope and see some of its moons. The moons of Jupiter don't do much for astrology. Some scientists from a long long long long time ago looked at Jupiter. Sometimes Jupiter appears bright in the night sky. It doesn't look like a star, because it doesn't twinkle. Mars is prettier than Jupiter in the night sky, because of the red color of Mars. There was a cool movie years ago about a spaceship near Jupiter with a computer that went crazy. According to scientists the monolith from that movie is ficton and doesn't really circle in Jupiter's orbit. Some spacecrafts have gone past Jupiter and have taken pictures, but no aliens were found on or near Jupiter. Aliens from Jupiter would probably hate living on Earth. Those aliens would look strange, because Earth and Jupiter aren't very similar. I would like to visit Jupiter someday, that would be nice.
The end
Feel free to use my essay, but if you want to get a good grade you should take a deep breath and start writing. This was fun.
2006-10-11 18:23:08
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answer #2
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answered by Zloar 4
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Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the largest within the solar system. Jupiter and the other gas giants—Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—are sometimes referred to as "Jovian planets".
The planet Jupiter has been known since ancient times and is visible to the naked eye in the night sky. The Romans named the planet after the Roman god Jupiter (also called Jove). The astronomical symbol for the planet is a stylized representation of the god's lightning bolt.
Jupiter is usually the fourth brightest object in the sky (after the Sun, the Moon and Venus); Jupiter is 2.5 times more massive than all the other planets combined,Jupiter also has the fastest rotation rate of any planet within the solar system, making a complete rotation on its axis in slightly less than ten hours, which results in an equatorial bulge easily seen through an Earth-based amateur telescope.
Jupiter is composed of a relatively small rocky core, surrounded by metallic hydrogen, surrounded by liquid hydrogen, which is surrounded by gaseous hydrogen. There is no clear boundary or surface between these different phases of hydrogen; the conditions blend smoothly from gas to liquid as one descends.
So far the only spacecraft to orbit Jupiter is the Galileo orbiter, which went into orbit around Jupiter on December 7, 1995. It orbited the planet for over seven years and conducted multiple flybys of all of the Galilean moons and Amalthea.
NASA is planning a mission to study Jupiter in detail from a polar orbit. Named Juno, the spacecraft is planned to launch by 2010.
Because of the possibility of a liquid ocean on Jupiter's moon Europa, there has been great interest to study the icy moons in detail. A mission proposed by NASA was dedicated to study them.
During the period July 16 to July 22, 1994, over twenty fragments from the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 hit Jupiter's southern hemisphere, providing the first direct observation of a collision between two solar system objects. It is thought that due to Jupiter's large mass and location near the inner solar system it receives the most frequent comet impacts of the solar system's planets.
2006-10-11 18:53:49
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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often i might want to assert do it your self, yet im bored and that i dont have college the following day, so #a million -32/3 + 100 and fifteen/12 -32/3 * 4 = -128/12 -128/12 + 100 and fifteen/12 = -13/12 -13/12 = -a million a million/12 #2 5/8 - a million/3 5/8 * 3 = 15/24 a million/3 * 8 = 8/24 15/24 - 8/24 = 7/24 #3 7/8 - 2/5 7/8 * 5 = 35/40 2/5 * 8 = 16/40 35/40 - 16/40 = 19/40 the asterisk is multiplication, my pc do not have branch and multiplication signs and indications.
2016-10-16 04:34:54
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Jupiter was the Roman father of the gods and the equivalent of the Greek Zeus. His father, a titan, was named Saturn in the Roman mythology. Jupiter killed him.
His wife was known as Juno (Hera in Greek mythology). She didn't get a planet.
One of his daughters (not his favorite) was named Venus. She's Aphrodite in the Greek version. His favorite daughter was named Athena in the Greek version and Diana in the Roman version.
What else would you like to know?
2006-10-11 18:11:26
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answer #5
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answered by loryntoo 7
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jupiter is the biggest planet etc etc blah blah blah blah
2006-10-12 02:01:34
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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sure I will do it but it will cost you $25 american ... in advance. we could work out a trade but then again u ain't that cute
2006-10-11 18:10:22
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answer #7
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answered by geo3598 4
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guess you dont do cut and paste
2006-10-11 18:09:57
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answer #8
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answered by cutlus 1
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Thanks for the offer, but I'll not, if that's OK with you.
2006-10-11 18:06:10
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Can you say, "N0"?
2006-10-11 18:11:58
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answer #10
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answered by Helmut 7
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