no solid surface on Jup. so no is the answer
Gas
europa
Jupiter has some H2O. Some of it is in the form of gas, and some in the form of ice. Virtually none of Jupiter's "water" is in the liquid state. Mercury has no water.
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.
Yes. There is lots of ice in space. 93% of the material in the rings of Saturn is made of water ice. Also, comets are composed of ice and dust, with some rocks.
Only Earth has Liquid water, Ice, and Gas. Many planets have clouds in the atmosphere; Venus and Jupiter, for example. But the clouds of Venus are made of sulfuric acid at several hundred degrees. Jupiter's moon Europa _might_ contain liquid water beneath the ice; there are interesting ridges on the surface that suggest water surging from cracks in the ice and then freezing. It will take a dedicated probe to discover what's going on there.
europa
Jupiter has some H2O. Some of it is in the form of gas, and some in the form of ice. Virtually none of Jupiter's "water" is in the liquid state. Mercury has no water.
Neither, Jupiter is acctually just a giant ice ball.
According to the NASA Fact Sheet on Jupiter, other than the oxygen contained in small amounts of water ice, Jupiter has no oxygen.
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.
there is ice pebbles and dirt possibly water thatz it
Jupiter has gases. It's composition consists of hydrogen (~90%), helium (~10%), methane (~3000ppm), ammonia (~260ppm), hydrogen deuteride (~28), ethane (~5.8ppm), water (~4ppm), and trace amounts of ammonia ice, water ice, and ammonia hydrosulfide.
Jupiter's precipitation is snow and ice.
Yes. There is lots of ice in space. 93% of the material in the rings of Saturn is made of water ice. Also, comets are composed of ice and dust, with some rocks.
Saturns moon Titan has water under ice as well as one of Jupiter's moon Europa
Only Earth has Liquid water, Ice, and Gas. Many planets have clouds in the atmosphere; Venus and Jupiter, for example. But the clouds of Venus are made of sulfuric acid at several hundred degrees. Jupiter's moon Europa _might_ contain liquid water beneath the ice; there are interesting ridges on the surface that suggest water surging from cracks in the ice and then freezing. It will take a dedicated probe to discover what's going on there.
The moon called Europa is most likely to have liquid water underneath it's icy crust. Europa is the 6th closest moon to the planet of Jupiter.