They are both planets. They both orbit the sun. They also both rotate on an axis.
If you want to reckon time on Jupiter according to earth time, then it is the same time on Jupiter as it is on earth. I would suggest UTC, universal time.
JUPITER SAVES EARTH FROM ASTROIDS FROM 4 BILLION YEARS . IF JUPITER DOES NOT EXIST , THERE WILL BE NO LIFE ON EARTH AND WILL BE THE SAME STORY THAT HAPENED WITH DINOSAURS . ASTROIDS WILL BE HITTING EARTH .
Same as on Jupiter. About 12 Earth years.
Weather that occurs on Jupiter is basically the same as the weather on Earth
From my calculations the distance from Saturn to Jupiter is nearly the same distance it is from Earth to Jupiter. Give or take 50 million miles or so the view of Jupiter from Saturn would be about the same as our view here is on Earth. Good question!!
Jupiter's orbital period is 4331.572 Earth days which is the same as 11.85920 Earth years.
Earth and Jupiter orbit the sun at different distances and speeds so the distance from Earth to Jupiter itself varies a lot. On average, the distance of any moon of Jupiter to the Earth is the distance from Earth to Jupiter.
Only that they are planets with some of the biggest moons. Earth is solid, Jupiter is gaseous. Earth has no ring, but Jupiter has one that can barely be seen! Earth has one big moon (If a moon the same size orbits Jupiter, that moon is a great moon), while Jupiter has a ton of moons! Also, 1000 Earths can fit into a Jupiter.
It is the same
The four main moons all look about the same brightness as seen from Earth, and they are all at about the same distance from the Earth. That means that their brightness seen from Jupiter would depend on their distances from Jupiter.
You would weigh about 2.3 times more on Jupiter than you would on earth, because of Jupiter's massive size. Your mass would remain the same though.
yes and no there;s no answer