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Study Reveals Jupiter’s Early Size and Magnetic Strength Far Surpassed Current Levels

New research confirms Jupiter was twice its current size and had a magnetic field 50 times stronger 3.8 million years after formation, supporting the core accretion model of planetary growth.

Overview

  • Jupiter was 2.0-2.56 times its current radius and had a magnetic field 50 times stronger during its early evolutionary phase, according to a new study published in Nature Astronomy.
  • Researchers Konstantin Batygin and Fred Adams used the orbital dynamics of Jupiter’s inner moons, Amalthea and Thebe, to reconstruct the planet’s early physical state.
  • The findings substantiate the bottom-up core accretion model, which suggests gas giants form through the gradual accumulation of solids and gas in the outer Solar System.
  • After the dissipation of the protoplanetary disk, Jupiter contracted under its gravity, reducing its size and increasing its rotation speed—a process that continues at a slow rate today.
  • The study highlights Jupiter’s pivotal role in shaping the Solar System’s architecture, stabilizing planetary orbits, and enabling conditions for life on Earth.