The sun.
No, stars do not revolve around Jupiter. Instead, Jupiter orbits the Sun along with other planets in our solar system. Stars are distant celestial bodies that have their own orbits and are not affected by individual planets like Jupiter.
Jupiter and stars are both spherical (ball-shaped) and they both orbit a larger body of some sort. Jupiter orbits our Sun, and stars orbit the center of their galaxy, and sometimes stars orbit another close star.
No, planets orbit around the sun. There are over 60 moons that orbit around Jupiter though.
From Jupiter's orbit, the stars would appear exactly as they do from Earth, with one exception: the Sun, which would be smaller. From below the clouds on Jupiter, you wouldn't be able to see any stars.
Jupiter has 63 confirmed moons in orbit around it. No planets are in orbit around it, since they would then be classed as moons. The planets in orbit either side of Jupiter are Mars and Saturn.
Jupiter does not orbit the earth. It takes 11.86 years for Jupiter to orbit the sun.
They orbit as stars would in any other halo. It is gravity that causes everything to orbit and "spin around" Stars can also orbit around other stars called a binary orbit.
Jupiter is a planet, like Earth. Where it actually is in the galexy is in an orbit around the Sun. Where it would appear to us (what direction from Earth) keeps changing as both Jupiter and Earth orbit the Sun; so where it appears relative to the stars will depend on when you are looking.
A planet's orbit is the length it travels around the Sun. Jupiter's orbit takes 12 years, which means one year on Jupiter would equal 12 Earth years.
Planets orbit the sun. Stars do not.
Moons orbit planets. Planets orbit stars. Some stars orbit other stars, or orbit their mutual center of gravity. Stars orbit the center of the galaxy. Galaxies may orbit the center of the "galactic group".
It is said that Jupiter orbits clockwise