The orbital revolution period for Jupiter (a Jovian year) is equal to about 4335.6 Earth days or about 11.86 Earth years. A "day" on Jupiter is about 10 hours, so this would be about 10,475.8 Jovian days.
The orbital period of Ganymede around Jupiter is 7.154 Earth days, or about one Earth week.
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.
It takes Ganymede approximately 7 days to complete one orbit around Jupiter.
Jupiter and Earth are not always the same distance apart. At their closest, it would take about 1.96 seconds. At their furthest, about 3.22 seconds.
If the sun suddenly stopped shining, it would take about 43 minutes for Jupiter to become dark, as that is how long it takes for sunlight to reach Jupiter. Jupiter's moons would also become dark since they rely on the sun's light for illumination.
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.
I am not entirely sure what you mean, if you mean how long does it take for Jupiter to go around its axis, the answer is 9.8 hours.
12 years.
Just under ten hours
It takes Jupiter approximately 11.9 Earth years to orbit the Sun once.
The orbital period of Ganymede around Jupiter is 7.154 Earth days, or about one Earth week.
well i dont care but you go yours by tony reyes
How long it takes for you to get there.
12 years
11.9 years
That would totally depend on how fast you were going. The Galileo spacecraft took six years to get to Jupiter going thousands of miles per hour.
Since Callisto is a moon of Jupiter, it orbits the Sun together with Jupiter - and takes just as long as Jupiter to orbit the Sun.