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Jupiter

American  
[joo-pi-ter] / ˈdʒu pɪ tər /

noun

  1. Also called Jove.  the supreme deity of the ancient Romans: the god of the heavens and of weather.

  2. Astronomy. the planet fifth in order from the sun, having an equatorial diameter of 88,729 miles (142,796 km), a mean distance from the sun of 483.6 million miles (778.3 million km), a period of revolution of 11.86 years, and at least 14 moons. It is the largest planet in the solar system.

  3. Military. a medium-range U.S. ballistic missile of the 1950s, powered by a single liquid-fueled rocket engine.


Jupiter 1 British  
/ ˈdʒuːpɪtə /

noun

  1. Greek counterpart: Zeus.  (in Roman tradition) the king and ruler of the Olympian gods

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Jupiter 2 British  
/ ˈdʒuːpɪtə /

noun

  1. the largest of the planets and the fifth from the sun. It has 67 satellites and is surrounded by a transient planar ring system consisting of dust particles. Mean distance from sun: 778 million km; period of revolution around sun: 11.86 years; period of axial rotation: 9.83 hours; diameter and mass: 11.2 and 317.9 times that of earth respectively See Galilean satellite

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Jupiter Scientific  
/ jo̅o̅pĭ-tər /
  1. The fifth planet from the Sun and the largest, with a diameter about 11 times that of Earth. Jupiter is a gas giant made up mostly of hydrogen and helium. It turns on its axis faster than any other planet in the solar system, taking less than ten hours to complete one rotation; this rapid rotation draws its atmospheric clouds into distinct belts parallel to its equator. Jupiter has more known moons by far than any other planet in the solar system—as many as 63, with new ones being discovered regularly in recent years—and it has a faint ring system that was unknown until 1979, when the Voyager space probe investigated the planet. A persistent anticyclonic storm known as the Great Red Spot is Jupiter's most prominent feature.

  2. See Table at solar system


Jupiter 1 Cultural  
  1. In astronomy, the largest planet in the solar system; the fifth major planet from the sun. Jupiter is largely composed of gas es. It is named after the ruler of the Roman gods (see under “Mythology and Folklore”). Jupiter is visible from Earth.


Jupiter 2 Cultural  
  1. The Roman name of Zeus, the most powerful of the gods of classical mythology.


Discover More

The fifth and largest planet from the sun (the Earth is third) is named Jupiter.

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Example Sentences

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It may have come from a distant region of the outer Solar System filled with rocky debris, or from the outer part of the asteroid belt near Jupiter.

From Science Daily Jul. 19, 2026

Customers for Peak who have out down a deposit include independent power providers Jupiter Power, Energy Vault and RWE Americas, who are connecting utilities, and increasingly data centers, with batteries.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 8, 2026

We’ve turned the games we love over zero-tolerance killjoys who would interrupt the Jupiter symphony because they think the oboe player held a note a half second too long.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 8, 2026

He also earned more than $30m each from golf clubs in Bedminster, New Jersey, and Jupiter, Florida, and Turnberry, Scotland.

From BBC Jul. 1, 2026

Then he had returned to Camp Jupiter with his new girlfriend Piper and a whole bunch of Greek friends in a warship.

From "The House of Hades" by Rick Riordan

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