What is the most radioactive planet?

Jupiter is the most radioactive planet. It has the greatest Electromagnetic field of all planets in Solar system according to Juno space mission ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juno_(spacecraft) ).
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What planet has high radiation?

Jupiter's Magnetic Field and Radiation Belts

Charged particles are trapped in the magnetosphere and form intense radiation belts. These belts are similar to the Earth's Van Allen belts, but are many millions of times more intense.
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What is the most naturally radioactive place on Earth?

Ramsar has the highest level of natural radiation in the world. Hot springs located in the Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary in Southern Australia are also credited with higher than normal radiation levels, due to spring water coming in contact with rocks rich in uranium and radon.
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Can planets be radioactive?

But researchers have now proposed that some planets, particularly ones that form near the center of our Milky Way Galaxy, might possess enough of these radioactive isotopes to generate sufficient heat to keep their surfaces from freezing entirely solid.
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Why is Jupiter radioactive?

It is Jupiter's combination of a strong magnetic field, Io's prodigious source, and the magnetic coupling of charged particles to the planet's rapid (10-hour) spin that drives the intense radiation.
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Comparison: Most Radioactive Things



Can Earth survive without Jupiter?

Without Jupiter, the Earth would be pummeled by impacts from asteroids and comets, rendering our planet utterly uninhabitable.
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Why can't we walk on Jupiter?

Jupiter is made up almost entirely of hydrogen and helium, with some other trace gases. There is no firm surface on Jupiter, so if you tried to stand on the planet, you sink down and be crushed by the intense pressure inside the planet.
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What is the most Earth like planet?

Kepler 452b is 1400 light-years from Earth, orbits its star every 385 days, and is 1.6 times the diameter of Earth.
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Is the sun radioactive?

The sun, powered by nuclear fusion, emits radiation that is both necessary and harmful to life on Earth. Light and infrared radiation (heat) are needed by almost all of Earth's life forms.
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Do planets ever crash?

But planetesimals are the building blocks of planets. And those blocks don't accrete in an orderly fashion. Instead, they crash into each other, sometimes shattering into smaller chunks, sometimes melding together to eventually form larger rocky planets.
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What city is full of radiation?

Chernobyl, Ukraine

On April 26, 1986 one of the world's largest nuclear disasters occurred when Reactor 4 exploded, and it released radiation that was 100-times more powerful than the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs combined.
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What state in the US is the most radioactive?

Colorado's Radiation Levels are the Highest in the World.
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What is the most radioactive city in America?

Not only is Pittsburgh radon some of the worst in the United States, but Canonsburg has been notorious as a town with a radioactive history. Marie Curie did several studies in Canonsburg, PA back in the 1920's and it was deemed "The Most Radioactive Town in America" .
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What planet has a lot of uranium?

That would mean most of the uranium is Mars, Mercury, Earth Venus and asteroid belt. There is an estimated 40 trillion tons of Uranium and 120 trillion tons of thorium in the Earth's crust. Most of that Uranium is concentrated in the continental crust.
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Which planet has most uranium?

Australia has the world's largest uranium reserves, 24% of the planet's known reserves.
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Is Mars full of radiation?

The Martian surface is constantly exposed to a high dose of cosmic radiation consisting of highly energetic particles and multiple types of ionizing radiation. The dose can increase temporarily by a factor of 50 through the occurrence of highly energetic solar flares.
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Can the Sun melt a human?

The sun is about 93 million miles away from Earth, and if we think of that distance as a football field, a person starting at one end zone could get about 95 yards before burning up. That said, an astronaut so close to the sun is way, way out of position.
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Can humans destroy the Sun?

In fact, since you've got the power to magically replace stellar cores, you would only need to replace the Sun's core with carbon or oxygen to kill it. It actually doesn't have enough mass to fuse even carbon. As soon as you replaced the Sun's core, it would shut off fusion.
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Can the Sun go nuclear?

While fusion is difficult to mimic on Earth, the core of the Sun and other stars is a perfect environment for it. Here, the temperatures are high enough for hydrogen nuclei to smash together and form helium nuclei, releasing tremendous amounts of energy in various forms.
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Which other planet can support life?

Among the stunning variety of worlds in our solar system, only Earth is known to host life.
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Is there any other planet with water?

Evidence points to oceans on other planets and moons, even within our own solar system. But Earth is the only known planet (or moon) to have consistent, stable bodies of liquid water on its surface.
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What planet can we live on besides Earth?

Besides Earth, Mars would be the easiest planet to live on. Mars has liquid water, a habitable temperature and a bit of an atmosphere that can help protect humans from cosmic and solar radiation. The gravity of Mars is 38% that of the Earth.
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Can you land on Uranus?

As an ice giant, Uranus doesn't have a true surface. The planet is mostly swirling fluids. While a spacecraft would have nowhere to land on Uranus, it wouldn't be able to fly through its atmosphere unscathed either. The extreme pressures and temperatures would destroy a metal spacecraft.
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What is under Jupiter's clouds?

Jupiter's clouds are thought to be about 30 miles (50 km) thick. Below this there is a 13,000 mile (21,000 km) thick layer of hydrogen and helium which changes from gas to liquid as the depth and pressure increase. Beneath the liquid hydrogen layer is a 25,000 mile (40,000 km) deep sea of liquid metallic hydrogen.
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Can you fall right through Jupiter?

There's no outer crust to break your fall on Jupiter. Just an endless stretch of atmosphere. The big question, then, is: Could you fall through one end of Jupiter and out the other? It turns out, you wouldn't even make it halfway.
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