Want this question answered?
As you know, the Earth has the northern eclipse, and Jupiter has things like these, it has glowy spots that form from electron beams from Io its moon, being whipped around Jupiter.
In one way it has craters. The other is it has dark spots.
Dear Inquirer, The difference between the distance of Earth to the Moon (238,857 miles), and Earth to Jupiter (390,682,810 - 576,682,810 miles) is anywhere from: 390,449,953 mi (closest) to 576,443,953 mi (farthest apart) Signed, -CosmicShaman419
Since mass is constant no matter what the gravity is, the mass would stay 5kg if you're on the moon, Earth, the Sun, Jupiter, Mars, Pluto, etc...Answers.com
Ganymede, the largest moon of Jupiter has the most mass of all the moons in the Solar System
It goes, the sun, Jupiter, Earth, and the moon.
In order from smallest to largest, the moon comes first, the Earth next, and then the Sun. The Sun is over 100 times larger than the Earth.
Only that they are planets with some of the biggest moons. Earth is solid, Jupiter is gaseous. Earth has no ring, but Jupiter has one that can barely be seen! Earth has one big moon (If a moon the same size orbits Jupiter, that moon is a great moon), while Jupiter has a ton of moons! Also, 1000 Earths can fit into a Jupiter.
Jupiter is bigger.
Not our (the Earth's) moon but Jupiter has lots of its own moons that orbit it.
Since Jupiter is further than the moon, there is not as much gravity as the Earth and moon.
Io is a moon of Jupiter.
Jupiter has a planetary volume of 1321 times that of the Earth. The Moon has a volume 0.020 times that of the earth. so the volume of Jupiter is 66,050 times the volume of the earth's Moon.If you ignore the spaces left vacant by the spherical shape of the moon, you would fit 66,050 Earth moons inside Jupiter; considerably fewer if you are really packing spheres the size of Earth's moon within a sphere of Jupiter's volume.
Impossible. If true, it would have to be the other way around, whereas Earth will be Jupiter's moon. This is because the gravitational field of Jupiter is FAR greater than Earth's.
As you know, the Earth has the northern eclipse, and Jupiter has things like these, it has glowy spots that form from electron beams from Io its moon, being whipped around Jupiter.
To the Moon Europa, you mean? Europa is a Moon of Jupiter; Jupiter is at a distance of about 40 minutes, on average. The distance from Earth varies, both because of the excentricity of Jupiter's orbit, and (mainly) because of the fact that the Earth goes on its orbit around the Sun.To the Moon Europa, you mean? Europa is a Moon of Jupiter; Jupiter is at a distance of about 40 minutes, on average. The distance from Earth varies, both because of the excentricity of Jupiter's orbit, and (mainly) because of the fact that the Earth goes on its orbit around the Sun.To the Moon Europa, you mean? Europa is a Moon of Jupiter; Jupiter is at a distance of about 40 minutes, on average. The distance from Earth varies, both because of the excentricity of Jupiter's orbit, and (mainly) because of the fact that the Earth goes on its orbit around the Sun.To the Moon Europa, you mean? Europa is a Moon of Jupiter; Jupiter is at a distance of about 40 minutes, on average. The distance from Earth varies, both because of the excentricity of Jupiter's orbit, and (mainly) because of the fact that the Earth goes on its orbit around the Sun.
Ganymede - it is a moon of Jupiter.