In terms of time of day, it would most of the time. Jupiter's day is much shorter than earth's. While a day on Earth is 24 hours, a day on Jupiter is just under 10 hours. It gets complicated, though, as Jupiter does not have a solid surface.
Well, it would never be able to "land" on Jupiter. By the time it reached anything related to solid "land" it would be crushed under the immense atmospheric pressures.
The teen curfew time in Jupiter, Florida is 11:00 pm on weekdays and midnight on weekends.
To start off, a light year is not a unit of time, it is a unit of distance; it is the distance that light travels in a year. Jupiter has a longer orbit than Venus, regardless of what unit of time you use.
Yes. Mercury is much closer to the Sun, making it harder to see. It also orbits the Sun more often than Jupiter, so it is often on the other side of it. Jupiter can be seen for months at a time when it is visible.
Jupiter is the planet with a year 11.8 earth years long.
Jupiter is about 62.5 times larger than Pluto.
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.
be pulled to the centre of the planet the weather is really harsh in Jupiter, the very first probe we sent into Jupiter was gone in a short period of time so its real harsh
A person who made up time, or cavemen.no one actually came up with the idea of time, because time is caused by gravity. The higher the gravity the faster time goes. For Example: If you had one person on Jupiter and another on Earth, the person on Earth would age slower than the person on Jupiter because Jupiter has a higher gravity than Earth.
There is no real solution to this question, other than to say 0700 AM GMT. Jupiter completes a full Jupiter "day" in just 9.8 hours, but it's Orbit takes nearly 12 years on Earth. But I don't believe anyone has assigned time zones to Jupiter or come up with a system of time different from our own to tell time on Jupiter. When spacecraft are sent out to observe our solar system, they refer to universal time and that is how they are tracked and controlled.
8 Earth years is the same length of time as roughly 2/3 of a year on Jupiter. Sadly, regardless of your age, I would be just as old on Jupiter as I am right here, although there might be some different number to describe it.
There is no such evidence at this time. Jupiter is a gas giant, and it doesn't have a surface. Life there would have to be very different from anything we now know. There is a solid core deep down near Jupiter's center, but anything falling that far would be completely crushed by the immense pressure from the gas.
because there are a lot of moons that surround Jupiter and they rotate around Jupiter at different paces not all can be seen at the same time
It's 11 times wider, therefore looks 121 times bigger (than Earth would at the same distance) and is 1330 times the volume of Earth.
A day would be a different length than 24 hours.
Jupiter is 390,674,710 miles from Earth. The time it would take to traverse this distance can only be determined if you provide the travel speed.
You would still be twelve, since time is the more or less the same on both planets. But if you are 12 years old the it is slightly more than 1 Jupiter year. Jupiter takes 11.862615 years to orbit the Sun.