Of Jupiter or the Sun? Technically it is orbiting both. It orbits the Sun at a radius of (on average) 5.204 AU or about 780 million kilometres.
Titan is a moon of Saturn (not Jupiter) and orbits Saturn at approximately 1.2 million kilometers radius. Saturn in turn orbits the sun at about 10 A.U. or 1.5 billion kilometers.
19.2 rE
pluto
Yes, spot on, good guess . .
532572872572
It depends on the radius of the orbit. Different orbit radii have different orbital periods. As an example, one of Mars's natural satellites, Phobos takes 7.66 hours to orbit Mars. It's orbital radius is around 9,400 km.
Yes. T = (2pi / sqroot of GM) multiplied by the radius^3/2. A planets mass DOES NOT affect its orbital period. A planets radius DOES affect its orbital period.
19.2 rE
pluto
yeet
Orbital speed of a satellite: v - orbital speed G - gravitational consatnt R - radius of earth h - height of orbit
a planet's orbital period. based off kepler's 3rd law (Wrong.)The planet's orbital radius. (Correct.)
The atomic radius is the distance from the nucleus of an atom to the outermost orbital of electron.
ecliptic but its really a plane orbital radius
Yes, spot on, good guess . .
532572872572
charge, atomic radius, orbital penetration, and electron pairing.
The electron and the outermost electrons' orbital radius.