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・ Jovestan
・ Jovetia
・ Jovetić
・ Jovette Bernier
・ Jovette Marchessault
・ Jovette Rivera
・ Jovi
・ Jovi (musician)
・ Jovi-ye Majid
・ JOVIAL
・ Jovial
・ Jovial (watch)
・ Jovial High School
・ Jovian
・ Jovian (emperor)
Jovian (fiction)
・ Jovian (lemur)
・ Jovian Ceparius
・ Jovian Chronicles
・ Jovian Europa Orbiter
・ Jovian Hediger
・ Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper
・ Jovian Storm
・ Jovian UAV
・ Jovianney Emmanuel Cruz
・ Joviano de Lima Júnior
・ Jovians and Herculians
・ Jovian–Plutonian gravitational effect
・ Jovibarba
・ Jovibarba globifera


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Jovian (fiction) : ウィキペディア英語版
Jovian (fiction)
In science fiction, a Jovian is an inhabitant of the planet Jupiter.
==Jovians in literature==

* In H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos (1928–...), Jupiter was the one-time home of the flying polyps.
* ''The Conquest of Two Worlds'' (1932) by Edmond Hamilton. Humans explore the solar system and discover intelligent life on Mars and Jupiter, and proceed to ruthlessly conquer and subjugate it. Jupiter is a humid jungle world with high gravity. The natives are friendly, hairless beings with thick hands and legs ending in flippers, small heads and large dark eyes.
* In Isaac Asimov's short story ''Victory Unintentional'' (1942), human colonists on Ganymede send robots to Jupiter to contact the Jovians, who are planning a war with the humans.
* In Poul Anderson's ''Three Worlds to Conquer'', sympathetic Centaur-like Jovians are in danger of extinction by cruel invaders from another region of the planet. At the same time their friends, the human colonists of Ganymede, are threatened by a powerful space warship commanded by a dictatorial militarist. Eventually, the two groups find ingenious ways to help each other defeat their respective enemies.
* In ''Skeleton Men of Jupiter'' (1943), the eleventh and last ''Barsoom'' book by Edgar Rice Burroughs, the hero John Carter is kidnapped and taken to Jupiter (also called "Sasoom" in the Barsoom franchise) by its inhabitants called the Morgors (also called "Skeleton Men" because they look like walking human skeletons). Jupiter is described as a harsh world warmed only by volcanoes, with forests of sentient trees.
* Arthur C. Clarke's ''A Meeting with Medusa'' (1972) proposes giant mile sized medusa-like creatures living in Jupiter's atmosphere.
* Arthur C. Clarke's ''2010: Odyssey Two'' (1982) depicts city-sized, cloud-like creatures, squid-like animals, and creatures resembling terrestrial aircraft.
* Ben Bova's novel Jupiter (2001) also features massive whale-like creatures kilometers long living in the liquid stage of Jupiter's atmosphere and are pictured as being intelligent.
* In the Larklight Trilogy by Philip Reeve, Jupiter's moons are inhabited by a variety of races. The planet itself has sentient storms the largest of which, Old Thunderhead, is worshipped as a God. The planet also possesses floating creatures that resemble animals in Earth's oceans.
* ''The Gobsmacking Galaxy'', an entry in the children's non-fiction series ''The Knowledge'' written by Kjartan Poskitt, humorously describes hypothetical alien life forms which might evolve on planets in the solar system; the Jovian is portrayed as a creature comparable to a massive hot air balloon which has learned to subsist on the radiation in Jupiter's atmosphere.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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