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13 votes
13 votes
Please help us with this math problem so we can sleep to night

User Musiq
by
2.4k points

1 Answer

17 votes
17 votes

In this case, we'll have to carry out several steps to find the solution.

Step 01:

Data:

Jupiter's mass = 1.89 x 10^27 kg

Moon's mass = 7 x 10^22 kg

Step 02:

We must analyze the problem to find the solution.


\frac{j\text{ mass}}{m\text{ mass}}=(1.89\cdot10^(27))/(7\cdot10^(22))=0.27\cdot10^5

0.27x10^5 = 27000

The answer is:

The mass of Jupiter is 27,000 times the mass of the moon.

User Dryadwoods
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3.1k points