60 minutes
it takes 4330.6earth days and that makes up 1 Jupiter year it takes so long because it is further away so it has a bigger orbit.
Jupiter's winds can reach speeds of up to 384 miles per hour (618 kilometers per hour) at its highest. These winds are located in Jupiter's upper atmosphere and are some of the most powerful in the solar system.
Earth is 1 AU from the Sun and Jupiter is 5.2 AU from the sun. Assuming we travel in a straight line we need to pass 4.2*150= 630 million kilometers. At 2 million km/hr it would take 315 hours which is 13 days and 8 hours. This calculation is not considering relativistic effects.
A second on Jupiter is about 0.413 Earth seconds long due to Jupiter's faster rotation speed.
Traveling at 500 miles per hour, it would take approximately 1,296 years to reach Jupiter, which is an average distance of 365 million miles from Earth. This calculation assumes a direct flight path and does not account for the gravitational pull of other celestial bodies or the changing positions of Jupiter and Earth in their orbits.
Google Maps estimates the driving time as 1 hour and 11 minutes.
Like jupiter! (:
9 hours and 56 minutes in earth hour
416 years 4.8 months at 100 miles per hour.
1/4 of an hour is 15mins.
1 day
11.9 Earth 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.
Approximately 888 (887.881159) years at 100km/h
Divide the distance, in miles, by the speed. The answer will be in hours.
A day on Jupiter lasts about 9.9 hours. Jupiter has a very fast rotation speed, making its day much shorter compared to Earth's 24-hour day.
Daylight on Jupiter lasts for around 10 hours, because Jupiter's rotation period is about 10 hours. Unlike Earth, which has a roughly 24-hour day, Jupiter's rapid rotation results in shorter daylight periods.