For one thing, the storm on Jupiter, called the Great Red Spot, is not a tornado. It is more similar to the anticyclones and large scale storm systems on earth than it is to a tornado. Since Jupiter is much larger than earth, it can sustained much larger storm systems, in this case larger than earth itself.
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No. A even a small thunderstorm is larger than very large tornado. This is partly due to the fact that tornadoes form within thunderstorms.
jupiter has about 2.5 times the gravity of earth therefore the acceleration due to gravity is 26 m/s/s.
the sun's radius is and half a million bigger than the radius of the sun.
No, but some telescopes have detected larger planets orbiting other suns. There are larger planets than Jupiter for they are called Super Jupiters
Just a Taint Bigger
jupiters rings are bigger than Saturns.
I think Mars is bigger than Earths moon.
A cyclone is bigger than a tornado by far, but a tornado is usually more violent.
No. A tornado and a twister are the same thing.
No. A tornado and a twister are the same thing.
no
Most likely not. The largest tornado on record was 2.5 miles wide. This is bigger than some towns but would not cover an entire city.
It is smaller than earth.
No, the Earth is not bigger than the Sun. The Sun is 109x bigger than the Earth.
No. As a approximation there is two thirds water to one third land.
There are theoretical categories beyond F5 but none of theme have ever been used. Since F5 damage is total destruction there is no real way of rating a tornado higher than F5. Also, a tornado's rating is not dependent on its size. So a bigger tornado does not necessarily get a higher rating.
Jupiter is the biggest planet in the solar system. However there have been 'super Jupiters' found orbiting other stars.