Perhaps you mean length of "night". Try asking the question again.
That's the approximate length of a light-year - the distance that light travels in a year.
Jupiter is an oblate spheroid and as such does not have a length.
No, Jupiter is not a source of light. It reflects light from the Sun, making it visible from Earth.
Jupiter and its moons get light from the same source we do: the sun.
Jupiter is the fastest rotating planet. It is 9.9 hours in a day and 12 earth years on Jupiter.
That's the approximate length of a light-year - the distance that light travels in a year.
Jupiter is an oblate spheroid and as such does not have a length.
the length of a day on Jupiter is average, 9.9 hours
The approximate length multiplied by the approximate width.
Look up the distance from Sun to Jupiter in kilometers, and divide it by 150 million. Answer will be in seconds. Or: Look up the distance in AU, and multiply that with 8m20s. That is the approximate time it takes for light to travel 1 AU.
No, Jupiter is not a source of light. It reflects light from the Sun, making it visible from Earth.
Jupiter rotates in about 9 hours and 50 minutes.
In Jupiter, time does not exist:D!
Jupiter and its moons get light from the same source we do: the sun.
Jupiter does not have light other than the lighting thunderstorms which give off the light.
That really depends on the speed. A ray of light will take less than an hour to reach Jupiter. Going with a spacecraft with current technology, it takes several years.
Jupiter is the fastest rotating planet. It is 9.9 hours in a day and 12 earth years on Jupiter.