its heat
Yes; in fact Jupiter is basically a brown dwarf; aka a failed star and is therefore, able to produce its own heat.
average -108 degrees Celsius
The composition of Jupiter's atmosphere is quite different from Earth's--Jupiter is composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, the same elements that make up most stars. In fact, we expect that Jupiter has basically the same composition as the Sun. Like the Sun, Jupiter has its own heat source, but Jupiter's heat comes from heat left over from the formation of the planet 4.5 billion years ago, and heat produced today due to the slight contraction of the planet under its own gravity. This means that Jupiter's composition might be very much like the original solar nebula from which it--and the solar system--formed, so investigating Jupiter's atmosphere is a way for us to investigate the early solar system.
All of the gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) radiate more heat than they receive.
its heat
Jupiter does not have any ground and so does not have any underground. However, Jupiter pumps out more heat from its interieor than it recieves from the sun.
No, the reason is there is too much pressure and heat around Jupiter.
Europa gets the amount of sunlight that moons of Jupiter can expect to get; not much. Jupiter is about 8 times further from the Sun than the Earth is, so it gets about 1/64th as much solar energy. "Enough"? Enough for what?
No. The distance between Jupiter and Saturn is larger than that of mars and Jupiter.
Yes; in fact Jupiter is basically a brown dwarf; aka a failed star and is therefore, able to produce its own heat.
Jupiter gives off more heat than it receives from the sun, so "emit" might be a better answer than either of the ones given.
No, Jupiter creates its own heat so it is 6,000 degrees below its clouds.
Saturn because it is called "Lord of Rings" because it has the largest amount of rings and Jupiter has the least amount of rings.
i don't know but i think beyond Jupiter's orbit is when you get no heat.
The "Surface" of Jupiter is hard to define as it is a gas giant but the top of the atmosphere (however you want ti define that) is cold due to heat radiating into space. Jupiter is so much farther from the Sun than Earth is, the Sun cannot heat Jupiter's atmosphere. And the heat form the interior (it is actually hotter than the surface of the Sun deep inside Jupiter!) dissipates into space.
average -108 degrees Celsius