Helium
The most common element found on Jupiter is hydrogen. Jupiter also contains helium and has traces of ammonia, rock, water, and methane. The planet contains liquid metallic hydrogen right above the core.
No, the noun Jupiter is a proper noun, the name of a specific planet. The common noun for Jupiter is planet.
Hydrogen
Water is a combination of the most common element in the universe and the third most common element in the universe, so it's not like it's rare. How, specifically, one would obtain it in the region near Jupiter ... well, we don't have any way of getting people there at present, so figuring that out hasn't been a super high priority.
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The most common elements of Jupiter are molecular hydrogen (89.8%) and helium (10.2%).
They both have the letter u in them.
Jupiter (or Zeus in his more common Greek form) was the god of the heavens and lightening in Roman mythology.
The common noun for the proper noun 'Jupiter' is planet or god (Roman god of the heavens).
Jupiter and Saturn are proper nouns, and planets is a common noun.
Not in the usual sense. Jupiter is composed of gas, not solid land, although there is some thought that the very center of Jupiter could be composed of iron or a similar element.
i know it it is a common element hope it helped