Book, Chapter
1 I, VII | about the size of one of Jupiter’s satellites seen through
2 I, VIII| like those of the planet Jupiter, would become limited to
3 I, XV | between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter; in their perihelia they
4 I, XVI | of the minor planets; but Jupiter, on the other hand, had
5 I, XXI | projected even to the orbit of Jupiter, where the temperature would
6 I, XXIV| between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, and had captured for herself
7 II, III | the attraction of Mars and Jupiter and Saturn, it will return
8 II, IV | extending beyond the orbit of Jupiter, lay clearly defined before
9 II, VII | 92, on Mars .5, and on Jupiter 2.45; on the moon the attraction
10 II, VIII| CHAPTER VIII~JUPITER SOMEWHAT CLOSE~Except as
11 II, VIII| none other than the planet Jupiter, the largest of all the
12 II, VIII| would be caused either by Jupiter, by Saturn, or by Mars;
13 II, VIII| as a new satellite around Jupiter, or whether it wended its
14 II, VIII| distance between Gallia and Jupiter was precisely the same as
15 II, VIII| course. The diameter of Jupiter is 85,390 miles, nearly
16 II, VIII| that the superficies of Jupiter is liquid), yet his other
17 II, VIII| proceeded to recapitulate that Jupiter accomplishes his revolution
18 II, VIII| point at the equator of Jupiter was twenty-seven times as
19 II, VIII| satellites? Sometimes, I suppose, Jupiter has the benefit of four
20 II, VIII| Procope. “I often think Jupiter is like a prodigious clock
21 II, VIII| hundred millions of centuries. Jupiter, the colossal planet, gravitating
22 II, VIII| captured by Mercury than by Jupiter, for Mercury, being so much
23 II, VIII| had crossed the orbit of Jupiter, and on the 1st of October
24 II, VIII| the planet, the orbit of Jupiter being inclined at an angle
25 II, VIII| verged towards its close, Jupiter began to wear an aspect
26 II, VIII| attention?~Meanwhile, as Jupiter grew large, the sun grew
27 II, VIII| was further observed that Jupiter itself was almost void of
28 II, VIII| interval between the comet and Jupiter was, by the 1st of October,
29 II, VIII| The belts all parallel to Jupiter’s equator were very distinct
30 II, VIII| earth.~“Only let us escape Jupiter,” said Lieutenant Procope,
31 II, VIII| not come athwart our path. Jupiter is our sole hindrance. Of
32 II, VIII| is our sole hindrance. Of Jupiter we must say, as William
33 II, IX | under the influence of Jupiter’s attraction, the comet
34 II, IX | 1st of November Gallia and Jupiter were 40,000,000 miles apart.
35 II, X | in an approach nearer to Jupiter than any other mortal man
36 II, X | had separated Gallia from Jupiter; the minimum distance of
37 II, X | consequently he is smaller than Jupiter; in mass he is only 90 times
38 II, XIII| re-crossed the orbit of Jupiter, but was still at the enormous
39 II, XV | between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. By the beginning of the
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