Jupiter - as well as other gas giants - doesn't HAVE a surface. Not one you can stand on, at any rate - those gas giants just have a gigantic atmosphere that gets denser and denser as you go down into the planet.
Jupiter is made entirely of gas. The two m.ain elements are hydrogen and helium. If you would try to step onto the serface of Jupiter, you would sink right in, and keep on going until the atmospheric pressure killed you. Jupiter, the biggest planet in our solar system.Aastronomers say that the "surface" of Jupiter is the point where the pressure of the atmosphere is 1 bar. This is the same atmospheric pressure as earth. If you look at Jupiter, you will see different shade of orange all mixing together.
From Jupiter's surface, its moons would appear as bright points of light in the sky, similar to our view of Jupiter's moons from Earth. They would range in size and brightness depending on their distance from Jupiter and their individual characteristics. The sight would be quite spectacular, with some moons appearing larger than others and potentially casting shadows on Jupiter's surface.
Io, the innermost of Jupiter's four largest moons, appears the brightest from Jupiter's surface due to its proximity to the planet and its reflective surface.
Jupiter does not have a solid surface, so it does not have a specific temperature at its surface. However, the upper atmosphere of Jupiter can reach temperatures of around 1,340 degrees Celsius (2,444 degrees Fahrenheit).
Because when I look up from the Earth, the surface of the Moon looks like nothing on Earth.
Jupiter's surface is actually not red. The reddish hue seen in some images of Jupiter is typically due to colorful gases in its atmosphere, such as ammonia and methane, interacting with sunlight. Jupiter's surface is believed to be composed of a thick layer of clouds and gas rather than a solid surface.
very cold
very cold
gass
No. Jupiter is a gas giant, so it does not even have a definite surface.
From Jupiter's surface, its moons would appear as bright points of light in the sky, similar to our view of Jupiter's moons from Earth. They would range in size and brightness depending on their distance from Jupiter and their individual characteristics. The sight would be quite spectacular, with some moons appearing larger than others and potentially casting shadows on Jupiter's surface.
io is the brightest from jupiters surface
no
Europa...
it rains horrs
No, Jupiter is composed mostly of gases.
4.56 billion years old, but it's surface is younger.
No but it usta be but the gases esolved the surface but I my self think there still is but not as much 90 % is mostly is gases .