Fig. 275.
Again: the interior of Jupiter seems to be the seat of an activity so enormous that it can be ascribed only to intense heat. Rapid movements are always occurring on his surface, often changing its aspect in a few hours. It is therefore probable that Jupiter is not yet covered by a solid crust, and that the fiery interior, whether liquid or gaseous, is surrounded by the dense vapors which cease to be luminous on rising into the higher and cooler regions of the atmosphere. Figs. 275 and 276 show the disk of Jupiter as it appeared in December, 1881.
Fig. 276.
255. Rotation of Jupiter.—Spots are sometimes visible which are much more permanent than the ordinary markings on the belts. The most remarkable of these is "the great red spot," which was first observed in July, 1878, and is still to be seen in February, 1882. It is shown just above the centre of the disk in Fig. 275. By watching these spots from day to day, the time of Jupiter's axial rotation has been found to be about nine hours and fifty minutes.
The axis of Jupiter deviates but slightly from a perpendicular to the plane of its orbit, as is shown in Fig. 277.
Fig. 277.