Could humans go from earth to an exoplanet 5 times the size of jupiter
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If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
reality-check science-fiction astrophysics
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If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
reality-check science-fiction astrophysics
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Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! Please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Please note that SE's Q&A format is one-specific-question/one-best-answer. We're generally lenient with first-time posters, but you've asked many very different questions, making the question "too broad." I recommend you take advantage of our Sandbox to develop this question (i.e., delete this question and re-post it in the Sandbox).
â JBH
1 hour ago
Alrighty thank you. I went ahead and trimmed it down to my one main question for now.
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Gas giant, or rocky planet?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Rocky earth like planet. i was thinking slightly less water. Maybe 50%
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
1
Survive as in "not get crushed by the stunningly high -- almost star-like -- gravity"?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
 |Â
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up vote
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up vote
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If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
reality-check science-fiction astrophysics
New contributor
If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
reality-check science-fiction astrophysics
reality-check science-fiction astrophysics
New contributor
New contributor
edited 1 hour ago
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
Dae Knight
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Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! Please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Please note that SE's Q&A format is one-specific-question/one-best-answer. We're generally lenient with first-time posters, but you've asked many very different questions, making the question "too broad." I recommend you take advantage of our Sandbox to develop this question (i.e., delete this question and re-post it in the Sandbox).
â JBH
1 hour ago
Alrighty thank you. I went ahead and trimmed it down to my one main question for now.
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Gas giant, or rocky planet?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Rocky earth like planet. i was thinking slightly less water. Maybe 50%
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
1
Survive as in "not get crushed by the stunningly high -- almost star-like -- gravity"?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
 |Â
show 2 more comments
2
Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! Please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Please note that SE's Q&A format is one-specific-question/one-best-answer. We're generally lenient with first-time posters, but you've asked many very different questions, making the question "too broad." I recommend you take advantage of our Sandbox to develop this question (i.e., delete this question and re-post it in the Sandbox).
â JBH
1 hour ago
Alrighty thank you. I went ahead and trimmed it down to my one main question for now.
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Gas giant, or rocky planet?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Rocky earth like planet. i was thinking slightly less water. Maybe 50%
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
1
Survive as in "not get crushed by the stunningly high -- almost star-like -- gravity"?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
2
2
Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! Please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Please note that SE's Q&A format is one-specific-question/one-best-answer. We're generally lenient with first-time posters, but you've asked many very different questions, making the question "too broad." I recommend you take advantage of our Sandbox to develop this question (i.e., delete this question and re-post it in the Sandbox).
â JBH
1 hour ago
Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! Please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Please note that SE's Q&A format is one-specific-question/one-best-answer. We're generally lenient with first-time posters, but you've asked many very different questions, making the question "too broad." I recommend you take advantage of our Sandbox to develop this question (i.e., delete this question and re-post it in the Sandbox).
â JBH
1 hour ago
Alrighty thank you. I went ahead and trimmed it down to my one main question for now.
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Alrighty thank you. I went ahead and trimmed it down to my one main question for now.
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Gas giant, or rocky planet?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Gas giant, or rocky planet?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Rocky earth like planet. i was thinking slightly less water. Maybe 50%
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Rocky earth like planet. i was thinking slightly less water. Maybe 50%
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
1
1
Survive as in "not get crushed by the stunningly high -- almost star-like -- gravity"?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Survive as in "not get crushed by the stunningly high -- almost star-like -- gravity"?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
 |Â
show 2 more comments
1 Answer
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If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
No.
Jupiter's mass is 318x that of Earth, and you want 5x that, which gives about 1600x Earth's mass.
That much mass in an rocky planet requires (using the formula for the volume of a sphere V=4/3ÃÂr^3, and presuming that the planet has the density of Earth) a radius 7.25x larger than Earth's.
Plugging the 1600x mass and 7.25x larger radius into Newton's universal law of gravitation (F = Gm1m2/r^2) while taking Earth's gravity as "1", such a planet's surface gravity would be 30.5x grater than Earth's.
You'd be crushed by your own mass.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
No.
Jupiter's mass is 318x that of Earth, and you want 5x that, which gives about 1600x Earth's mass.
That much mass in an rocky planet requires (using the formula for the volume of a sphere V=4/3ÃÂr^3, and presuming that the planet has the density of Earth) a radius 7.25x larger than Earth's.
Plugging the 1600x mass and 7.25x larger radius into Newton's universal law of gravitation (F = Gm1m2/r^2) while taking Earth's gravity as "1", such a planet's surface gravity would be 30.5x grater than Earth's.
You'd be crushed by your own mass.
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
No.
Jupiter's mass is 318x that of Earth, and you want 5x that, which gives about 1600x Earth's mass.
That much mass in an rocky planet requires (using the formula for the volume of a sphere V=4/3ÃÂr^3, and presuming that the planet has the density of Earth) a radius 7.25x larger than Earth's.
Plugging the 1600x mass and 7.25x larger radius into Newton's universal law of gravitation (F = Gm1m2/r^2) while taking Earth's gravity as "1", such a planet's surface gravity would be 30.5x grater than Earth's.
You'd be crushed by your own mass.
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
No.
Jupiter's mass is 318x that of Earth, and you want 5x that, which gives about 1600x Earth's mass.
That much mass in an rocky planet requires (using the formula for the volume of a sphere V=4/3ÃÂr^3, and presuming that the planet has the density of Earth) a radius 7.25x larger than Earth's.
Plugging the 1600x mass and 7.25x larger radius into Newton's universal law of gravitation (F = Gm1m2/r^2) while taking Earth's gravity as "1", such a planet's surface gravity would be 30.5x grater than Earth's.
You'd be crushed by your own mass.
If humans were to travel from earth to another planet that was an exoplanet 5 times the mass of Jupiter, would they be able to survive?
No.
Jupiter's mass is 318x that of Earth, and you want 5x that, which gives about 1600x Earth's mass.
That much mass in an rocky planet requires (using the formula for the volume of a sphere V=4/3ÃÂr^3, and presuming that the planet has the density of Earth) a radius 7.25x larger than Earth's.
Plugging the 1600x mass and 7.25x larger radius into Newton's universal law of gravitation (F = Gm1m2/r^2) while taking Earth's gravity as "1", such a planet's surface gravity would be 30.5x grater than Earth's.
You'd be crushed by your own mass.
answered 57 mins ago
RonJohn
13.5k12763
13.5k12763
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
Dae Knight is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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2
Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! Please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Please note that SE's Q&A format is one-specific-question/one-best-answer. We're generally lenient with first-time posters, but you've asked many very different questions, making the question "too broad." I recommend you take advantage of our Sandbox to develop this question (i.e., delete this question and re-post it in the Sandbox).
â JBH
1 hour ago
Alrighty thank you. I went ahead and trimmed it down to my one main question for now.
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
Gas giant, or rocky planet?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago
Rocky earth like planet. i was thinking slightly less water. Maybe 50%
â Dae Knight
1 hour ago
1
Survive as in "not get crushed by the stunningly high -- almost star-like -- gravity"?
â RonJohn
1 hour ago