No, it's only about 10 hours long.
Yes 1 day on Earth is 24 hours, 1 day on Jupiter is about 9.9 hours
Yes 1 day on Earth is 24 hours, 1 day on Jupiter is about 9.9 hours
No. Jupiter rotates very fast, and a "day" on Jupiter is a little under 10 hours long.
A day on Earth because a day on Earth is 24 hours and a day on Jupiter is 10 hours
Earth, Jupiter's days only last about 10 hours.
No. Jupiter's day is 9 hours 50 minutes 30 seconds.
A day on Jupiter is less than 10 Earth hours
No two planets in our solar system have the same length of day or length of year. Compared with Earth, these planets have longer years: Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. These have much longer days than Earth: Mercury and Venus. Mars has a day that's slightly longer than Earth's day. Depending on the particular definition of "day" that is used, two planets have a day that's longer than than that planet's year. They are Mercury (solar day) and Venus (sidereal day).
Well, basically different planets take longer to orbit the Sun. For example, Jupiter takes longer to orbit than earth, so Jupiter has a longer year. On Venus, a day lasts longer than a year as it takes longer to spin on its axis that to orbit the sun.
Because it goes slower and its orbit around the Sun is bigger, Jupiter's year is longer than Earth's year.
In terms of time of day, it would most of the time. Jupiter's day is much shorter than earth's. While a day on Earth is 24 hours, a day on Jupiter is just under 10 hours. It gets complicated, though, as Jupiter does not have a solid surface.
Jupiter rotates really fast. so that way the sun sets faster