Jupiter has an average distance from the sun of 778.5 million km. That is not the distance from the earth. Sometimes it is less and sometimes it is greater, it moves. There is not a straight line distance it varies.
Walking you cover an average of about 4 kilometres an hour. Divide that into the average distance. By the way, what are you going to walk on, breathe and eat.
There are about 2.4 Jupiter days in one Earth day.
It would take approximately 168 days for a shuttle travelling at 475 km per minute to reach Jupiter, which is about 628.7 million kilometers away from Earth on average.
well it would take approximately 49 earth days
Jupiter's orbital period is 4330.6 Earth days (approx. 24 hrs/day). However a Jupiter day is only about 10 hours so the period in Jupiters days would be 2.4 times as great.
That depends on the speed of your spacecraft. The space probes that we've sent there generally take a couple of years to make the trip, but better engines could shorten it to months - or weeks! If you had an engine that could accelerate at one gravity the whole way, the trip would take only a few days, depending on where Jupiter and Earth were in their orbits.
Europa orbits Jupiter every 3.5 earth days
There are about 2.4 Jupiter days in one Earth day.
You'd run out of fuel on the first day!
As earth revolves around the sun at a much faster speed than Jupiter does, the distance is changing a lot from year to year, even every minute. If say starting from the sun, even at the speed of light, it would take approx 43 minutes to get to Jupiter. If the rocket managed an approximate of 1/100 of the speed of light, then the trip would take roughly 3 days or approx 72 hours. With this speed, from earth, when earth is aligned with Jupiter on the right side of the sun, the trip would roughly be done in 63 hours. (Approx 2 days and 15 hours). Rockets today can not achieve this speed, but who knows what future holds for us.
Depends really on what speed you are going. Jupiter is approximately 780 million km from the Sun. So at 1,000 kph it will take about 32,500 days
At the level in the atmosphere where the pressure is one (1) bar, Jupiter has an equatorial circumference of about 44384 miles. A standard walking pace for someone energetically walking distance is 4 miles per hour.At that rate, if there were a surface to walk on, and there is not one at that level, it would take a person 11096 hours or 924 Earth days (walking 12 hours per day) or a bit more than 2.5 years to walk around Jupiter, assuming you never took a day to rest or be ill.
One day on Jupiter is approximately 9.9 hours, while a week on Earth is 7 days. To convert to Earth days, you would need to multiply Jupiter days by Earth days, leading to approximately 13.5 days passing on Jupiter in one Earth week.
The orbital revolution period for Jupiter (a Jovian year) is equal to about 4335.6 Earth days or about 11.86 Earth years. A "day" on Jupiter is about 10 hours, so this would be about 10,475.8 Jovian days.
38,788.475 miles/hour, or 62, 424 km/hr. Io circles Jupiter every 1.76 days
10,475.8 Jupiter days are in a Jupiter year.
It would take approximately 168 days for a shuttle travelling at 475 km per minute to reach Jupiter, which is about 628.7 million kilometers away from Earth on average.
The time it takes to walk 300 km depends on the walking speed and duration of walking each day. Assuming an average walking speed of about 5 km/h, it would take approximately 60 hours of walking. If a person walks for 8 hours a day, it would take about 7.5 days to complete the distance. However, this can vary based on individual pace, terrain, and rest breaks.