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.
Our moon, the earths moon, is the fifth largest moon in the solar system. Ganymede is the largest moon (a moon of Jupiter), then Titan is the second largest (moon of Saturn), then third is Callisto (another moon of Jupiter) and the fourth largest is Io (another of Jupiters moons).
The Earth is larger than the moon, and therefore only a fraction (1/50) of the Earth would theoretically "fit" inside the space of the moon. Therefore, 50 moons could fit inside the Earth.
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.
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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.
there are 66 moons in Jupiter
Ganymede, one of Jupiter's moons, has a diameter of about 5,268 kilometers, making it the largest moon in the solar system. In terms of volume, Ganymede can contain approximately 2.5 times the volume of Earth. Therefore, about 2.5 Earths could fit inside Ganymede, although this is a rough estimate since it depends on the specific measurements and shapes considered.
Because it is actually earth's moon. Not venus nor saturn nor jupiter, etc. Earth's moon!
cause there are many kinds of moons one is called the earth moon some moons are and some are small__________________________Before the invention of the telescope, there was only one moon, "the Moon" - EARTH'S Moon. It wasn't until Galileo pointed his new Dutch telescope at Jupiter that anybody had any idea that other planets might have moons of their own. Jupiter, he saw, had FOUR moons!
Approximately 72 million Earth moons could fit inside the sun.
Europa is one of Jupiter's many moons.
The moon we see doesn't, but all of Jupiter's moons do. (About 50)