Europa
According to the Wikipedia article on Io, it seems that Io doesn't have much water - on the other hand, some of the other moons of Jupiter have quite a lot of water. Europa probably does have a lot water under its surface.
Erosion is not a solid planet, like Earth, it is a gas giant. As such it does not have a surface to erode by anything. So there is no water erosion on Jupiter.
the water cycle shows arrow under surface
No, Jupiter is composed mostly of gases.
Yes, water is present on Jupiter in the form of water vapor in its atmosphere. However, due to Jupiter's extreme temperatures and pressure, water exists in a molecular form rather than as liquid or ice on its surface.
there is ice pebbles and dirt possibly water thatz it
Europa, one of Jupiter's moons, is thought to have a subsurface ocean beneath its icy crust. This ocean could potentially harbor conditions suitable for life due to the possibility of geothermal activity providing heat and energy.
According to the Wikipedia article on Io, it seems that Io doesn't have much water - on the other hand, some of the other moons of Jupiter have quite a lot of water. Europa probably does have a lot water under its surface.
Europa, which is one of Jupiter's moons.
Jupiter does not have a solid surface like Earth, so it does not have water on its surface. However, scientists believe that there may be water in the form of ice or liquid deep within Jupiter's atmosphere.
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Pluto have rock as surface Earth has water and rock as surface Uranus and Neptune have ice as surface(under the ice there's water) Jupiter and Saturn have no surface at all
Because Jupiter is a gas planet and does not have the correct elements to make water Jupiter does not have any water on it. But one of Jupiter's moons, Europa, has ice, a form of water. The the cracks in the moon suggest that there is an an ocean or source of water under the surface, and when the planet shifts and cracks the water that comes to the surface freezes.
Europa is one of the many moons of Jupiter and one of the four main moons. It is thought to have a liquid water or soft ice layer under a thick layer of surface ice. Ceres (dwarf planet) is also thought to possibly have a water layer under a thin, dusty crust.
no food has been ever found on Jupiter yet but possibly water
Jupiter's moons - Europa and Ganymede possibly have oceans of liquid water under their crust. Saturn's moon - Enceladus also has a possible ocean of water under it's crust.
It's hard even to define the surface for a gas planet like Jupiter, but there's no significant amount of water anyway.
Europa is covered in water ice, so most likely under the ice there is an ocean of water, maybe salt water, possibly harboring microbial life, like those seen on earth at the bottom of the oceans that thrive in sulfur rich water but need no sunlight.