The spacecraft studying the giant planet picks up some wave signals, and NASA slows them to a frequency humans can hear. Eric Mack has been a CNET contributor since 2011. Eric and his family live 100% ...
We present updated simulations of the detectability of Jupiter analogs by the 17-year Anglo-Australian Planet Search. The occurrence rate of Jupiter-like planets that have remained near their ...
RECENT radio observations of Jupiter, in the frequency-range 14–27 Mc./s., have suggested the presence of an ionosphere and a magnetic field on the planet. If the magnetic field is regarded as being ...