It depends on the size of the vessel and the kind of propulsion used... so I can't really give an answer. On a side note 90-95% of a spacecraft's fuel is used to break earth's gravity, once in space it takes very little fuel to move a large distance.
Typically around 7 years. It can vary by a large amount depending on how large the payload is, how much fuel is used, whether or not the rocket will enter orbit around Jupiter or just fly by, etc.
A satellite couldn't go to Jupiter since satellites are objects,natural or manmade, that are in orbit around other celestial objects such as planets and stars. If you mean how much fuel would a spacecraft/spaceship need to go to Jupiter, that would depend on the mass of the spacecraft and the acceleration. For example, if you pushed your spaceship to fifty thousand miles per hour, it would continue at that speed without any more fuel being used because space is a nearly total vacuum and offers almost no resistance to an object passing through it. If you wanted to keep speeding up on the way, it would take a lot of fuel.
It takes the longest because it is the furthest away from Jupiter.
Jupiter's year is 4,332.71 days, or 142.5 months.
Jupiter's orbit takes 4331.6 days approx.
It takes 10,394 gallons of fuel.
Jupiter does not orbit the earth. It takes 11.86 years for Jupiter to orbit the sun.
It takes Jupiter 11.86 Earth years to orbit the Sun.
No one will ever know, because it would take so much fuel that it would not be able to get there and come back alive. that is not true there is no life on jupiter because there is deadly gasses and has deadly swrilying gas coluds, i am not sure if jupiter has had any life on it from the past but i really wouldnt think so. sciencetist though there was life on it because there is water on jupiter, but then the said there wasnt any life on jupiter because everything practilly on jupiter is deadly.
Jupiter orbits the sun in about 4332 days, which is about 11 years and 11 months.
From what perspective? From Earth, you will never see Jupiter go across the Sun, as the Earth is much closer to the Sun than Jupiter.
As much as I'm tempted, I'm afraid I can't take credit for those accomplishments. They were both the work of Galileo Galilei.
11.86 earth years.
In terms of volume, 1320 Earths.
It depends on the type of aircraft
11.9 Earth years
11.86 earth years.