Not really, in fact being a gas giant, Jupiter probably doesn't really have a surface - although at some point the hydrogen of which it's mainly made may solidify under enourmous pressure.
Jupiter is a gas giant made mostly of hydrogen and helium, and it does not have a solid surface like Earth. Therefore, it is unlikely to have liquid water on its surface. However, water vapor has been detected in Jupiter's atmosphere.
Jupiter has very little water (0.0004%).There is no LIQUID water on Jupiter because Jupiter is a gas giant. However, Jupiter DOES have evaporated water in its atmosphere and one of its moons, Europa, is said to have a frozen ocean on its surface.
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 the moon of Jupiter with a surface made mostly of water ice. This moon is believed to have a subsurface ocean that may contain more water than all of Earth's oceans combined.
A number of factors make it unlikely that Jupiter has a water on its surface.1. Jupiter doesn't even have a surface! If a space craft were to land on Jupiter, it would sink because Jupiter is comprised almost entirely of gases.2. Jupiter's distance from the sun make it improbable that there is liquid water existing.3. The various gases in Jupiter's atmosphere would make the water highly acidic, perhaps corrosive acid rain.4. None has been detected. However, humans have not scanned every trace of Jupiter personally, machinery can take incorrect data, extraterrestrials may have tampered with what we see, anything could affect the information sent to us. It is possible that a single compound of water exists, but in such quantities that it is easily detectable, there is no such data that supports this.
It's hard even to define the surface for a gas planet like Jupiter, but there's no significant amount of water anyway.
Jupiter is a gas giant made mostly of hydrogen and helium, and it does not have a solid surface like Earth. Therefore, it is unlikely to have liquid water on its surface. However, water vapor has been detected in Jupiter's atmosphere.
No, Jupiter is composed mostly of gases.
Jupiter has very little water (0.0004%).There is no LIQUID water on Jupiter because Jupiter is a gas giant. However, Jupiter DOES have evaporated water in its atmosphere and one of its moons, Europa, is said to have a frozen ocean on its surface.
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.
No. Jupiter has no solid surface on which bodies of water might exist, though clouds of liquid water may exist below the visible cloud surface. In addition to lacking a solid surface, Jupiter has an unbreathable atmosphere and the gravity is more than twice as strong as it is on Earth.
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.
Jupiter has no surface.
Europa is the moon of Jupiter with a surface made mostly of water ice. This moon is believed to have a subsurface ocean that may contain more water than all of Earth's oceans combined.
there is ice pebbles and dirt possibly water thatz it
A number of factors make it unlikely that Jupiter has a water on its surface.1. Jupiter doesn't even have a surface! If a space craft were to land on Jupiter, it would sink because Jupiter is comprised almost entirely of gases.2. Jupiter's distance from the sun make it improbable that there is liquid water existing.3. The various gases in Jupiter's atmosphere would make the water highly acidic, perhaps corrosive acid rain.4. None has been detected. However, humans have not scanned every trace of Jupiter personally, machinery can take incorrect data, extraterrestrials may have tampered with what we see, anything could affect the information sent to us. It is possible that a single compound of water exists, but in such quantities that it is easily detectable, there is no such data that supports this.
Jupiter is a gas planet. It has no surface.