No one has yet travelled to Jupiter.
Europa - a moon of Jupiter.
Look out at night. It would appear as a bright white "star" in the sky (only the sun, moon, and venus get brighter in our sky) along the celestial equator (earths equator projected out in to space. Figure that you can see Jupiter for about 7 months and then not see it for five months over a year as earth goes around its orbit and the sun is between earth and Jupiter thus obscurring our view. Jupiter can be seen when it's close to the sun but you need the proper equipment and caution to see it during those times because of the danger of accidently looking at the sun.
Because Jupiter is a planet in our own solar system, making it easier to send probes and satellites to, and some scientists believe a Jupiter moon might be capable of supporting life (Europa). Some facts about Jupiter: - 5.20 AU from Sun - 1 Jupiter year=11.86 Earth years - 1 Jupiter day=9.97 Earth hours - Jupiter has 3 faint rings (all our gas giants have rings) - Jupiter does not experience seasons
Jupiter is the planet and the objects that go round it are the moons of Jupiter. (planets go round the Sun - moons go round planets). The 4 jovian moons you can see with a pair of binoculars are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Ganymede is the largest and the most obvious.
he was the first to see Jupiter
Some people probably do, but those people are not scientists. Scientists know that Jupiter does not have a solid surface, so there is nothing to land on.
Scientists do not currently know for certain if there are any lifeforms on Jupiter. Our technology has not progressed to the point that we can go all the way to Jupiter and find out.
From what perspective? From Earth, you will never see Jupiter go across the Sun, as the Earth is much closer to the Sun than Jupiter.
Galileo.
One of the 68 moons in Jupiter was classifed as a planet. Some scientists came to the conclution that vb12 was the 68th moon in Jupiter. As you can see, a large porcion of the scientist were wrong. Not every scientist come to the same conclution.
no, we scientists have not yet figured it out. But someday...
We do not know if Jupiter has a land mass, it is composed of of 90% hydrogen, and 10% helium. It is unforunate that we can not see the inside of Jupiter from our telescopes but todays scientists belive that there is no surface area to begin with. One day astronauts will find their way to Jupiter but they would probably have to stay above the clouds
yes you can see Jupiter from venus
The core of Jupiter probably contains rock and metallic hydrogen. The surface of Jupiter is made of water, methane, and ammonia.
One thing Galileo was famous for was studying Jupiter and its moons.
Europa - a moon of Jupiter.
no, it is highly impossible to see a crescent Jupiter.