9.9259 hours
Jupiter has the fastest rotation of any planet in the solar system.
A day on Jupiter is less than 10 Earth hours
It is about half an earth day. The exact time is 0.41354 earthreal days.
Jupiter has a rotational period of about 9.9 hours. In one Earth week, which is 168 hours, Jupiter completes approximately 17 rotations. This means that in the span of a week, Jupiter experiences a significant number of its day-night cycles compared to Earth.
Jupiter takes about 11.86 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun. In terms of hours, this is approximately 103,500 hours. Jupiter's long orbital period is due to its distance from the Sun and its massive size.
There are 4.9625 hours in one night on Jupiter.
1 Day on Jupiter = 9.933333 Earth Hours. 10 Days on Jupiter = 99.33333 Earth Hours.
A day on Jupiter is less than 10 Earth hours
In Jupiter, 9 Earth hours and 55 minutes is approximately equal to 0.4167 Jupiter days. Jupiter's rotational period is about 9.9 hours, so 9 Earth hours and 55 minutes is less than half a Jupiter day.
Jupiter spins VERY quickly, rotating in about 10 hours.
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.
One day on Jupiter is a little under 10 hours
A day on Jupiter is approximately 9.9 hours, which is significantly shorter than a day on Earth, which is approximately 24 hours long. So, about 10 hours on Jupiter would be equivalent to a day on Earth.
Not hours - Jupiter orbits around the Sun in 11.86 years.
A year on Jupiter is the amount of time for Jupiter to make one full revolution around the sun. The "year" on Jupiter takes 4331.57 Earth days (11.86 Earth years).Because Jupiter spins much faster than Earth, its day is as little as 9.84 Earth hours. This works out to 10,563 "Jupiter days" in a "Jupiter year."
It is about half an earth day. The exact time is 0.41354 earthreal days.
About 0.41 days. Jupiter rotates in about 9 hours and 56 minutes.
Jupiter has a rotational period of about 9.9 hours. In one Earth week, which is 168 hours, Jupiter completes approximately 17 rotations. This means that in the span of a week, Jupiter experiences a significant number of its day-night cycles compared to Earth.