The diameter of Jupiter is 142,984km, and it's radius is 71,492km.
Jupiter has about 29.3 times the diameter of Mercury (at equator).
Give that Jupiter's mean radius is 69,911 kilometers and Mars' radius is 3,396 km, you would be able to line up about 20 Mars across Jupiter. For comparison you could line up 11 Earths across Jupiter. In terms of volume you can fit 8,724 Mars and 1,321 Earths inside Jupiter.
Jupiter is more than 1000 times bigger than earth.
The diameter of Jupiter at its equator is approximately 142,984 kilometers.
The diameter of Jupiter is 142,984km, and the diameter of Earth is 12,756km. This would mean that Jupiter's diameter is 11.2x greater than that of Earth.
The diameter of Jupiter is 142,984km, and it's radius is 71,492km.
Jupiter has the largest diameter (the radius is half the diameter, of course).
Whoever made the question you mean DIAMETER. It is 3,270 miles in diameter
The equatorial radius is 71.492 Kms, the diameter 142.98 kms
The equatorial radius is 71,492 km. The polar radius is 66,854 km
the diameter on Jupiter is 10'000 miles (116'000 kilometers)
Jupiter has about 29.3 times the diameter of Mercury (at equator).
Jupiter has about 11 times the diameter (or radius) of Earth. Wikipedia lists its radius as: Equatorial radius: 71,492 ± 4 km Polar radius: 66,854 ± 10 km Note that there is quite a big difference between the two; since Jupiter rotates quite fast, it is "stretched out" in the horizontal direction.
Jupiter's largest moon is Ganymede, with a radius of 2640 km.
Give that Jupiter's mean radius is 69,911 kilometers and Mars' radius is 3,396 km, you would be able to line up about 20 Mars across Jupiter. For comparison you could line up 11 Earths across Jupiter. In terms of volume you can fit 8,724 Mars and 1,321 Earths inside Jupiter.
Radius = Diameter/2 Diameter = 2* Radius
Jupiter is more than 1000 times bigger than earth.