Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(6)
All that makes it an inhospitable hot gas ball.
If it's more massive to 10 times the mass of the Earth, it's a gas ball.
It was thought a gas ball such as Jupiter could not condense in such hot surroundings.
Jupiter is a gas ball, so heated up, the atmosphere expands, and it's incredibly nice and fluffy.
Because if it's bigger than two times the size of the Earth, then it's a gas ball.
Coming as close as 5000 kilometers to the 140,000-kilometer-diameter gas ball, Juno and it's gravity-gauging system should measure the mass of any rocky core at the center of Jupiter.
Similar(54)
Strong winds also are found to be associated with objects called protostars, which are huge gas balls that have not yet become full-fledged stars in which energy is provided by nuclear reactions (see below Star formation and evolution).
The planet has the fastest and smallest orbit of any of the 100 or so Jupiter-like gas balls that have recently been found orbiting stars other than the sun.
Unfortunately for the theorists, the orbit of OGLE-TR-56b is 2.5% of the diameter of the earth's—so they must now go back to the drawing-board.New gas balls are always welcome.
Although the gas balls certainly form some distance from a star, where things are reasonably cool, they then spiral inwards due to interactions with the discs of dust and gas that surround stars for a few million years after they are born.This idea could explain most of the properties of the newly-discovered planets.
William Wilson, 56, described "a mass of debris and gas balls coming down" as he left work, an engine flying away overhead and "pieces of metal and stuff coming through the roofs around us". His colleague in the motor-fitting shop was Thomas B. Flannigan of 16 Sherwood Crescent, who had gone home half an hour earlier.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com