heck if i know?
No. The Sun is about 250 times more massive than Jupiter.
Jupiter, its more massive.
Jupiter is the moss massive planet that revolves around the sun, with a mass of 1.8988 x 1027 kg. This is 234% more mass than the next massive planet, Saturn, which has a mass of 5.685 x 1026 kg.
The gravitational pull from Jupiter to the sun is stronger than the gravitational pull from Saturn to the sun. This is because Jupiter is more massive than Saturn, so it exerts a greater gravitational force over larger distances.
You have to take away sun's circumference to jupiter's circumference. sun's circumference is 4,239,000 and jupiter's circumference is 449.020.
Jupiter is both the most massive and the largest of those objects.
Jupiter.
Of all of the mass in the solar system, the Sun is 99.5%. Of the half-percent left, over half is Jupiter, leaving one quarter of one percent of the solar system's mass for the Earth, Mars, Venus, the other planets, all the asteroids and comets and all the space dust.
Jupiter would need to be about 80 times more massive to become a star like our Sun. This is because a star needs to have enough mass to sustain nuclear fusion in its core, a process that generates energy and heat. Jupiter is a gas giant planet and does not have enough mass to sustain nuclear fusion.
Jupiter is 10 times smaller than the Sun and it is 1/1000 the mass of the sun.
Jupiter
The most massive bodies orbiting the Sun are the eight planets in our solar system. These include Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Each planet varies in size and mass, with Jupiter being the most massive and Mercury being the least massive.