The surface pressure on Jupiter varies between 20 and 200 kilo pascals.
On Earth, the surface pressure is around 100 kilo pascals.
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According to measurements of Viking spacecrafts the average pressure is around 0.7% of the normal pressure on the Earth, but they are large seasonal variations due to freezing of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during the winter. Source: http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/M/Marsatmos.html Martin Cizek
No, it is not possible to walk on Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas giant composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with no solid surface to walk on. The extreme pressure and gravity on Jupiter would also make it impossible for a human to stand or move on its surface.
Earth's atmospheric pressure is measured as 1 bar. Jupiter's atmospheric pressure is 100 million bars. Therefore, it is 100 million times greater
Actually, no. there may be a solid surface at the core of Jupiter, but you would not be able to stand on it. Well to get to it because going through all those gases Jupiter is made up of may seem easy... possible but you would actually be crushed by the pressure of it and die a horrible death.
Jupiter does not have a solid surface like Earth, so it does not have water on its surface. However, scientists believe that there may be water in the form of ice or liquid deep within Jupiter's atmosphere.
According to measurements of Viking spacecrafts the average pressure is around 0.7% of the normal pressure on the Earth, but they are large seasonal variations due to freezing of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during the winter. Source: http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/M/Marsatmos.html Martin Cizek
Jupiter has no definite surface. If you did not have a suitable aircraft you would simply fall into the planet's interior to be crushed by the immense pressure.
No, it is not possible to walk on Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas giant composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with no solid surface to walk on. The extreme pressure and gravity on Jupiter would also make it impossible for a human to stand or move on its surface.
No, it is not possible for humans to land on Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas giant without a solid surface, so any spacecraft would be crushed by the intense pressure and heat in its atmosphere before reaching a potential core.
No, the reason is there is too much pressure and heat around Jupiter.
Jupiter has very strong gravity, extremely high atmospheric pressure, poisonous gasses and probably no surface.
No, because there is no surface to Jupiter, it is a gaseous planet with nowhere to land a spacecraft. Temperatures and pressure on Jupiter are also very extreme.
We have no information at all concerning surface features on Jupiter, including whether or not it has anything that me might cause a "surface".
The acceleration of gravity at the 'surface' of Jupiter is 2.639 times its value at the Earth's surface.
Earth's atmospheric pressure is measured as 1 bar. Jupiter's atmospheric pressure is 100 million bars. Therefore, it is 100 million times greater
No. Jupiter does not have a surface to land on. A probe was launched into the atmosphere. It took some measurements before it was eventually crushed by the immense pressure.
Jupiter has no surface.