Jupiter Masses to Solar Masses

1 Jupiter mass is about 0.000955 solar masses on this page.

Direct Answer

1 Jupiter Mass equals 0.000955 Solar Masses

This conversion uses fixed astronomy mass constants anchored to kilograms.

For 2 Jupiter Masses, the result equals 0.001909 Solar Masses.

Converter Calculator

0.000955 Solar Masses (M_sun)

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Explanation

This page converts Jupiter Masses into Solar Masses using fixed astronomy mass constants anchored to kilograms. The direct answer, calculator, and common values table all follow the same factor.

Formula: Solar Masses = Jupiter Masses × 0.000955. Why: stellar mass references such as solar masses are normalized through kilograms before the target scale is applied.

Jupiter Masses (M_jup): a giant-planet reference mass unit widely used for exoplanets and large planet comparisons.

Solar Masses (M_sun): the standard stellar mass reference unit used to compare stars and very large astronomical objects.

This route is useful when translating between stellar mass references and other astronomy scales so star and large-object comparisons stay on the intended basis.

Because the route stays inside one kilogram-based reference model, the mirror page reverses the same constants without changing the underlying assumptions.

Method & Reference

  • Method basis: exact conversion formula shown in Direct Answer.
  • Applied factor: 1 Jupiter Mass = 0.000955 Solar Masses.
  • Consistency rule: calculator output and table values use the same constants and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

Jupiter Masses (M_jup)Solar Masses (M_sun)
1 0.000955
2 0.001909
5 0.004773
10 0.009546
100 0.095457
1,000 0.954568

Frequently Asked Questions

How many solar masses is 1 Jupiter mass?

1 Jupiter mass is about 0.000955 solar masses on this page.

What is the mass of Jupiter in solar masses?

Using the fixed astronomy mass constants on this page, Jupiter is about 0.000955 times the mass of the Sun.

Does this page use fixed astronomy mass constants?

Yes. The conversion is anchored to fixed kilogram-based astronomy mass constants so the factor stays consistent across the page.