The answer is 10 days
1 Day on Jupiter = 9.933333 Earth Hours. 10 Days on Jupiter = 99.33333 Earth Hours.
jupiter takes about 4332 earth days to orbit the sun
the revolution period of Jupiter is 4331 days.
The revolution period for the planet Jupiter is 11.86 years. It completes its rotation within 9.8 hours compared to Earth's 24 hours.
It takes Jupiter about 11.86 Earth years to orbit the Sun. So that's about 11.86 x 365.25 Earth days. That's about 4332 Earth days. It takes Jupiter about 9.8 hours to rotate. That's about 0.41 Earth days.
The orbital revolution period for Jupiter (a Jovian year) is equal to about 4335.6 Earth days or about 11.86 Earth years. A "day" on Jupiter is about 10 hours, so this would be about 10,475.8 Jovian days.
Io is a moon of Jupiter. It can have a period of revolution around Jupiter of 1.769 days or you can have Jupiters revolution around the Sun of 11.85920 days.
One day on Jupiter is approximately 9.9 hours, while a week on Earth is 7 days. To convert to Earth days, you would need to multiply Jupiter days by Earth days, leading to approximately 13.5 days passing on Jupiter in one Earth week.
A year on Jupiter is the amount of time for Jupiter to make one full revolution around the sun. The "year" on Jupiter takes 4331.57 Earth days (11.86 Earth years).Because Jupiter spins much faster than Earth, its day is as little as 9.84 Earth hours. This works out to 10,563 "Jupiter days" in a "Jupiter year."
Mercury takes 88 days to complete one revolution. Venus takes 225 days to complete one revolution. Earth takes 365.26 days to complete one revolution. Mars takes 687 days to complete one revolution. Jupiter takes 11.8 yrs to complete one revolution. Saturn takes 29.5 yrs to complete one revolution. Uranus takes 84 yrs to complete one revolution. Neptune takes 164.8 yrs to complete one revolution.
Jupiter's revolution in Earth years is 11.86...... Emma-Carson<3
In Jupiter, 9 Earth hours and 55 minutes is approximately equal to 0.4167 Jupiter days. Jupiter's rotational period is about 9.9 hours, so 9 Earth hours and 55 minutes is less than half a Jupiter day.