Geography, asked by jupideka27, 10 months ago

How jupiter is bigger than other planets'?

Answers

Answered by anirudh2005kk
1

Answer:Jupiter is the fifth planet from our Sun and is, by far, the largest planet in the solar system – more than twice as massive as all the other planets combined. Jupiter's stripes and swirls are actually cold, windy clouds of ammonia and water, floating in an atmosphere of hydrogen and helium.

Almost 11 times bigger than Earth. Jupiter's radius is about 1/10 the radius of the Sun, and its mass is 0.001 times the mass of the Sun, so the densities of the two bodies are similar. ... Jupiter is also 2.5 times more massive than all the other planets combined, having 318 times the mass of Earth.

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Answered by tripathiriya2006
0

Jupiter is so massive that its barycenter with the Sun lies above the Sun's surface at 1.068 solar radii from the Sun's center. It is the only planet whose barycenter with the Sun lies outside the volume of the Sun. If Jupiter would be 75 times more massive, it would probably become a star.

Enough dust could have collected and cemented together in the dense gas to form a core many times larger than the size of the Earth.

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