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Comments
ptkooistra t1_ix1lgyi wrote
It would appear roughly 7.7 times bigger than it does now.
ScreamingNightHog t1_ix1os48 wrote
Jupiter's diameter 140,000 km
Mars diameter 6792 km
Jupiter is about 20x as wide as Mars
Mars is about 9300 arcseconds.
So Jupiter in Mars's spot would appear about 20x that, about 186,000 arcseconds
The Moon is about 1800 arcseconds, so Jupiter in Mars's spot would look about 100x as big as the Moon. That seems awfully big; I must have made a mistake.
ScreamingNightHog t1_ix1pv2n wrote
Maybe we can balance out the gravity by putting Saturn in Venus's orbit. Haha.
disagree83 t1_ix1qx6o wrote
>Mars is about 9300 arcseconds.
This is the mistake. Mars is about 25 arcseconds at its closest.
https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/marsfact.html
SaltyPea8 OP t1_ix1ybef wrote
I didn’t do the math I was just asking if someone could make a rendition of it for me
[deleted] t1_ix1yn0n wrote
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the_fungible_man t1_ix1ztjy wrote
Someone linked to a drawing in the very first comment.
[deleted] t1_ix20cq3 wrote
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[deleted] t1_ix2aebp wrote
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damo251 t1_ix2pv62 wrote
And Mars will only get to 17.2arc sec this year and Jupiter gets a smigin over 50 but only 49 arc sec this year.
Azdrubel t1_ix30zt1 wrote
That would put Jupiter at 400 arcseconds? Like holy shit, 20% of the moons visual size?!
[deleted] t1_ix3jh79 wrote
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Enron55 t1_ix3twoc wrote
Ah yes a gravitational tug of war that tears the planet apart
Fueledbyhops t1_ix3ynqd wrote
I believe it would be just a big bright star, Bigger then some. I strongly doubt we'd be able to see its actual shape like how we see the moon.
canadian_eskimo t1_ix1l5da wrote
You could actually Google this and sifr through the results. Took me a minute or so to get a general answer:
There's even a mock up.
https://qr.ae/pvdxcs