Need help converting values regarding Jupiter's mass, and moons.

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The discussion revolves around converting the orbital period and height measurements of one of Jupiter's moons into different units. The user has a period (P) of 7 days and a height value of 4 but is unsure how to convert these into years, astronomical units (AU), and kilometers. A participant suggests using the conversion factor provided to calculate kilometers directly from the Julian days. There is also confusion regarding the specific definitions of the measurements, particularly the meaning of "height of the peaks above zero" and the units associated with the value of 4. Clarification on these points is necessary for accurate conversions.
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Here is my problem. I have charted out the data points of one of Jupiter's moons, and have concluded for this example, a value of: P(in days) of 7, and a (height of the peaks above zero) of 4

Now, here is what I am having trouble doing:

"Convert P and a to years and AU. Then, convert a to KM"

Can anyone help me with this?

I know that one J.D = 0.00096 = 142,984 km

?
 
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Anyone? :)

Thanks

nukeman said:
Here is my problem. I have charted out the data points of one of Jupiter's moons, and have concluded for this example, a value of: P(in days) of 7, and a (height of the peaks above zero) of 4

Now, here is what I am having trouble doing:

"Convert P and a to years and AU. Then, convert a to KM"

Can anyone help me with this?

I know that one J.D = 0.00096 = 142,984 km

?
 
nukeman said:
Anyone? :)

Thanks

Strange question. Convert to years and AU, then to km. Why? You already have it in JD. So multiply by that conversion factor you've quoted to get km. Though diameters are a bit odd, since it's usually in radii as that's what plugs into the equations.

As for conversion to 'years', which year do they mean? A standard Julian year is 365.25 days, but there's several other years that get used to, such as the Gaussian.

An AU is presently defined as 149,597,870.7 km. You'll see 149,597,870.691 km get quoted, but that's a bit too precise for the error bars. Hopefully someone has seen fit to tell you what AU value to use.
 
Your question is not very clear... What does 'height of the peaks above zero' mean? What is the '4' ? Inches, miles, lightyears, cubits? JD=jupiter's diameter? Is the orbital radius of this moon 4 * JD ?
 
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