500 kg contains the same amount of matter wherever you take it.
But it would weigh about 15 times as much on Jupiter as it would
on the moon.
A good slogan for Jupiter would be: "Jupiter--go big or go home!"
It took the Galileo spacecraft about six years to reach Jupiter from Earth.
They orbit Jupiter so would share that planets position in relation to the Sun.
None. The only object other than Earth on which people have set foot is the moon. It would be impossible to walk on Jupiter as it does not have a solid surface.
Io is 400,000 km from Jupiter, while it is 600 million km from Earth. Therefore it is 1500 times closer to Jupiter, and because of that would appear 16 magnitudes brighter. It appears as a 5th magnutide star from the Earth, so its magnitude from Jupiter would be -11, which is about half as bright as we see our moon.
It depends on how old you are when you go there (if you go there) and if you are born on Jupiter then it would matter when you where born and what year it was on Jupiter. But it will only matter if humans start habitating Jupiter. :)(:
yes
about 100 pouns
You mass is the same no matter where you are. You weight would be greatest on Jupiter.
you would a suit made of plutonium at least make one cycle around jupiter..but to crash into the watery surface of Jupiter you need a suit made completely of dark matter.
If you are cooking something that is 500kg and it needs to be cooked for 5mins/100g, then: 500kg = 500 000g --> 500 000 x (5/100) = 2500 minutes = 41 hours 40minutes Unless you meant 500g; in that case it would be 25 minutes (500/100 x 5)
No. Mass is the measure of how much matter is in an object, while weight is how that mass is influenced by gravity. For example, if you were to move an object from earth to Jupiter, its mass would remain the same, but its weight would increase because Jupiter is larger and would pull on it more.
mass, it never changes based where you are. and matter too, energy not sure but i doubt it. weight is the only one that changes
To be like a star a planet would have to be very large and contain a lot of hydrogen. Jupiter may be considered to be most like a star in this respect, though Jupiter would need to be about 75 times as massive to fuse hydrogen and become a star.
Since mass is constant no matter what the gravity is, the mass would stay 5kg if you're on the moon, Earth, the Sun, Jupiter, Mars, Pluto, etc...Answers.com
Jupiter is uninhabitable mainly due to the fact that it only has a very small rock core, and the rest of its mass is gas. Also, the gravity on Jupiter is about 254% of earth's, which means that humans would probably be squashed flat if we were fully exposed to it. On top of all this, there is also the small matter of the ever raging storms and the cosmic radiation, which would make living on Jupiter a very difficult feat.
if you were 14 and lived on Jupiter for its year, You would be about 26 when Jupiter completed its revolution