The final masses of Jovian planets are attained when the tidal torques that they exert on their surrounding protostellar disks are sufficient to open gaps in the face of disk viscosity, thereby shutting off any further accretion. In sufficiently well ionized disks, the predominant form of disk viscosity originates from the magnetorotational instability (MRI) that drives hydromagnetic disk turbulence. In the region of sufficiently low ionization rate, the so-called dead zone, turbulence is damped and we show that lower mass planets will be formed. We considered three ionization sources (X-rays, cosmic rays, and radioactive elements) and determined the size of a dead zone for the total ionization rate by using a radiative, hydrostatic equilib...