No. The planet Jupiter is surrounding by a dense atmosphere of gases, mostly hydrogen, and does not have the solid surface of terrestrial planets such as Earth. The pressure near its rock core is so high that it is covered by liquid and even solid hydrogen at more than 11,000 degrees Celsius.
Yes
not often
a rock fall is when rocks fall off cliffs or other things it is mostly for Stonehenge and Stonehenge rocks fell because of the angry birds.
No. Australia explorer Edward Eyre did not fall off a cliff, despite travelling close to the high cliffs of the Great Australian Bight.
Weathered cliffs are formed as natural rain storms or snow and ice cause parts of the cliffs to break off and fall. This weathering also includes erosion caused by water passing from the top of the cliff to the bottom.
You can't really fall "off" a planet; you might fall "onto" a planet.Even if you were able to get onto Jupiter though, you wouldn't be able to stay on Jupiter; you would fall through it since the planet is completely made from gas. You would keep falling until there was too much pressure, and then youwould burst into flames, die, and probably just plain burst apart.
Not in the usual sense. Jupiter is composed of gas, not solid land, although there is some thought that the very center of Jupiter could be composed of iron or a similar element.
Im not sure really. Just try to avoid cliffs and swimming, unless your a good swimmer
No. You can fall off cliffs or get crushed, but if you do, a character named Angie carries you away from the obstacle, and you lose some gems.
It is known as a waterfall if the fall is down cliffs. If it is a series of shallow waterfalls tumbling over boulders, it is known as cataracts or rapids.
Moons orbit Jupiter because of the combined influence of gravity. and the forward motion of the moons. If there were gravity along, the moons would fall into Jupiter. If there were only forward motion, the moos would fly off into space.
they are preety pea brained