Give that Jupiter's mean radius is 69,911 kilometers and Mars' radius is 3,396 km, you would be able to line up about 20 Mars across Jupiter. For comparison you could line up 11 Earths across Jupiter.
In terms of volume you can fit 8,724 Mars and 1,321 Earths inside Jupiter.
The biggest planet, Jupiter's diameter is a huge 142,740 km, while the smallest planet, Mercury's diameter is a tiny 4,880 km. So, it would take 28.4 Mercurys to equal the diameter of Jupiter.
This question is normally worded "how many earth's would fit across the diameter of Jupiter?" The diameter of Jupiter is a little under 87,000 miles. Earth's diameter is a little under 8000 miles. 87,000/8000 = 10.9 (just about 11) earth diameters. Jupiter's circumference is 87,000(pi), or 273,000 miles. You could therefore fit 34 earths in a circle around Jupiter.
Jupiter is the most massive planet and has the strongest gravity. However the surface we can see is only the top of the atmosphere. Presumably there is a surface that someone could theoretically stand on, but it is of uncertain diameter so the answer is not a definite one. The same applies to all four gas-giants, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Jupiter
yes, Jupiter is the Solar System's largest planet. Weighing millions of pounds but only of gas. There is a big storm on Jupiter now that has lasted for thousands of years. It has almost 2.5 times the mass of the other eight plants combined and over 1,300 Earths could fit inside it.
The biggest planet, Jupiter's diameter is a huge 142,740 km, while the smallest planet, Mercury's diameter is a tiny 4,880 km. So, it would take 28.4 Mercurys to equal the diameter of Jupiter.
This question is normally worded "how many earth's would fit across the diameter of Jupiter?" The diameter of Jupiter is a little under 87,000 miles. Earth's diameter is a little under 8000 miles. 87,000/8000 = 10.9 (just about 11) earth diameters. Jupiter's circumference is 87,000(pi), or 273,000 miles. You could therefore fit 34 earths in a circle around Jupiter.
You cant live on Jupiter it's a gas planet. But if you could i would play basketball.
No. Jupiter is a gas planet, so there is no surface to land on.
No. Jupiter is a gas planet. It does not have a definite surface.
Jupiter is the largest planet of our solar system, as such any other planet would fit within Jupiter if it was hollow.
No, It's a gas planet and there's no solid ground.
No, Jupiter has no surface to build on as it is a gas giant planet.
Jupiter is a gas giant planet and has essentially no solid surface so no people could live on Jupiter. If Jupiter were magically a solid planet with earth's gravity, climate and resources but the size of the real planet Jupiter, it cold probably support 100 times as many people as the Earth currently does.
Jupiter is the most massive planet and has the strongest gravity. However the surface we can see is only the top of the atmosphere. Presumably there is a surface that someone could theoretically stand on, but it is of uncertain diameter so the answer is not a definite one. The same applies to all four gas-giants, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
no Jupiter is a gas planet, and has very extreme temperatures that no one could suvive
Jupiter is the largest planet in our solar system, with a diameter of 142,984 and a mass of 1899x1024kg. Not only could Jupiter hold all the planets inside of it if it were hollow, but it would also fit all the moons inside of it as well (and there would still be room for more!).