Jupiter is typically the fourth brightest planet in our solar system, after Venus, Mars, and sometimes Mercury.
Jupiter is the second brightest planet in the sky after Venus and the fourth brightest object in the sky. The sun and the moon are the brightest objects in the sky, but they are not planets.
Jupiter is the second brightest planet after Venus.
The brightest planet at night, depending on phase, is Venus. Jupiter and Mars can be a close second, depending on the season.
Clouds would be second. Beyond earth's atmosphere the moon would be the brightest object in the sky, now followed by the International Space Station. Venus has been displaced from 3rd to 4th place. None of these objects shine with their own light, but from reflected light of our sun.
sixth
The third biggest planet in our solar system is Uranus, after Jupiter and Saturn.
Jupiter is the second brightest planet after Venus.
The second Brightest planet is Jupiter.
The brightest planet at night, depending on phase, is Venus. Jupiter and Mars can be a close second, depending on the season.
The brightest planet at night, depending on phase, is Venus. Jupiter and Mars can be a close second, depending on the season.
Europa is Jupiter's brightest moon. This is because...
Clouds would be second. Beyond earth's atmosphere the moon would be the brightest object in the sky, now followed by the International Space Station. Venus has been displaced from 3rd to 4th place. None of these objects shine with their own light, but from reflected light of our sun.
Jupiter is the second brightest in the world after the sun
None of those, it's the biggest.
Hardly right now (June 2013), since it is almost exactly in the direction of the Sun. However, when it is in another direction, it is the second-brightest "star" (planets look like stars), after Venus, which is also a planet; you might also say that Jupiter is the fourth-brightest object in the sky, after Sun, Moon, and Venus. (On rare occasions, Mars is slightly brighter than Jupiter.)
Hardly right now (June 2013), since it is almost exactly in the direction of the Sun. However, when it is in another direction, it is the second-brightest "star" (planets look like stars), after Venus, which is also a planet; you might also say that Jupiter is the fourth-brightest object in the sky, after Sun, Moon, and Venus. (On rare occasions, Mars is slightly brighter than Jupiter.)
sixth
No. Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun. Venus is the second planet.