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Approximately 3 Earths could fit inside Jupiter's Great Red Spot, which is a giant storm that has been raging for centuries on the planet. The storm is large enough to fit several Earth-sized planets within it.
The Great Dark Spot on Neptune, similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot, is a massive storm system on the planet's surface. It is estimated to be about the size of Earth. Therefore, you could fit approximately one Earth inside Neptune's dark spot.
Approximately 3 Earths could fit inside Jupiter's iconic red spot, also known as the Great Red Spot. This means the spot is vast enough to hold an impressive amount of Earth-sized objects within its boundaries.
you could fit roughly 3 earths in the Red Spot.
The Great Red Spot on Jupiter is a massive storm that is about 1.3 times the diameter of Earth, which is roughly 16,350 kilometers (10,159 miles) across. This means that approximately two Earths could fit side by side within the Great Red Spot. The storm has been observed for over 350 years, showcasing its immense size and longevity in Jupiter's atmosphere.
Approximately 3 Earths could fit inside Jupiter's Great Red Spot, which is a giant storm that has been raging for centuries on the planet. The storm is large enough to fit several Earth-sized planets within it.
24 Earths could fit in it. More than 1,300 in the whole Jupiter.
The Great Dark Spot on Neptune, similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot, is a massive storm system on the planet's surface. It is estimated to be about the size of Earth. Therefore, you could fit approximately one Earth inside Neptune's dark spot.
Approximately 3 Earths could fit inside Jupiter's iconic red spot, also known as the Great Red Spot. This means the spot is vast enough to hold an impressive amount of Earth-sized objects within its boundaries.
you could fit roughly 3 earths in the Red Spot.
you could fit roughly 3 earths in the Red Spot.
Voyager 1 and 2 in 1979
About 300 years (109,500 days)
It depends where you're looking from. I think its on the bottom left corner.
Jupiter's giant red spot is really just a giant storm and is sometimes nicknamed Jupiter's Red eye.
one of jupiters features are that it surface is mostly made of hydrogen and helium
The cause of Jupiters' red-spot is stranger than fiction..... If we were to look out on the cosmos just 500'000 years ago Jupiter would've looked very different; a bland, lifeless gas giant with nothing much going on. But about this time Jupiters' mass gravitational pull attracted a mass of asteroids, some the size of Texas! The unfathomable energy released by these impacts caused Jupiters' upper and lower atmospheres to fly into chaos and mass weather storms erupted which engulfed the entire planet (the swirls that we still see to this very day). But why is one localised point, a spot in which you could fit three of our Earths, glowing red? Well, asteroids normally carry with them a wealth of elements (Nitrogen, Iron, Water, etc) but these asteroids carried two elements unseen in the cosmos since........ Toffe and Rhubarb. Scientists are still unclear as to how the asteroids contained these food-stuffs but, just look at the colouration of Jupiters' surface and it's easy to see how these elements were distributed. Upon impact a huge tornado pulled all the rhubarb into it, causing the red-spot we still see today. The toffee was melted by the immense heat and spread throughout the rest of the planet. Dude! The red-spot is rhubarb puree!! Stranger than fiction man, I told you.